Friday, 10 May 2013
Monday, 29 April 2013
A Husband's Affection to His Wife
By William Gouge
An husband’s affection to his wife must be answerable to his opinion of her: he ought therefore to delight in his wife entirely, that is, so to delight in her as wholly and only delighting in her. In this respect the Prophet’s wife is called the “desire” (Ez.24:16), or delight, or pleasure of his eyes: that wherein he most of all delighted, and therefore by a propriety so called. Such delight did Isaac take in his wife as it drove out a contrary strong passion, namely the grief which he took for the departure of his mother: for it is noted that “he loved her, and was comforted after his mother’s death.(Gen.24:67)
This kind of affection Solomon doth elegantly set forth in these words, “Rejoice with the wife of thy youth: Let her be as the loving Hind, and pleasant Roe, and be thou ravished always with her love.” (Prov.5:18 & 19)
The attributes given to the forenamed creatures much amplify the point: the former is termed a “loving” Hind, the latter a “pleasant” Doe, word for word “an Hind of Loves, a Roe of favor,” that is, exceedingly loved and favored: for to set forth the extent of God’s love unto his Son, Christ is called the “son of his love”. (Col.1:13)
These comparisons applied to a wife, do lively set forth that delight which an husband ought to take in her, and yet is it much further amplified by the hyperbole used in this phrase, “be thou ravished with her love,” word, for word, “err thou in her love,” by which no sinful error, or dotage is meant, but a lawful earnest affection: implying two things especially: First so far to exceed, as to make a man overlook some such blemishes in his wife, as others would soon espy and mislike; or else to count them no blemishes, delighting in her never a whit the less for them. For example, if a man has a wife, not very beautiful, or proper, but having some deformity in her body, some imperfection in her speech, sight, gesture, or any part of her body, yet so to affect her, and delight in her, as if she were the fairest, and in every way most complete woman in the world. Secondly, so highly to esteem, so ardently to affect, so tenderly to respect her, as others may think him even to doat on her.
An husbands affection to his wife cannot be too great if it kept within bounds of honesty, sobriety and comeliness. The wife’s affection ought to be great to her husband, yet because of the husbands place of authority, he must especially take all occasions to manifest this his inward affection. Read the Song of Songs, and in it you shall observe such affection manifested by Christ to his Spouse, as would make one think he did (with reverence in an holy manner to use the phrase) even err in his love and doat on her. A good pattern and precedent for husbands. For nothing is more lovely than a good wife.
---------------
William Gouge
(1575–1653) was a godly husband and father to his family, and a spiritual
father to many more. Born in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I,
Gouge grew up in a godly home. He inherited a spiritual legacy and passed it on
to future generations.
Wednesday, 16 January 2013
The Necessity of Biblical Antithesis
At War With the Word:
The Necessity of Biblical Antithesis
The Necessity of Biblical Antithesis
Greg L. Bahnsen
The
following discussion is an excerpt from the 1987 Van Til Lectures, delivered by
Dr. Bahnsen at Westminster Seminary, Philadelphia.
The
antithesis between followers of God and followers of Satan is sovereignly
inflicted as God's judicial curse. This enmity is not only social but also
intellectual in nature, and, therefore, to ignore it in our apologetic is to
compromise the gospel.
Without
the ingredient of antithesis, Christianity is not simply anemic, it has
altogether forfeited its challenge to all other worldviews. Anyone who is
familiar with the corpus of Van Til's publications and writings will recognize
that the subject of antithesis is one fitting hallmark of his scholarly
contribution to twentieth century apologetical theory.
Antithesis in Van Til's Apologetic
It was in
the interest of antithesis that Van Til wrote his first major classroom
syllabus, now entitled A Survey of Christian Epistemology, stating that,
"It is necessary to become clearly aware of the deep antithesis between the
two main types of epistemology," Christian and non-Christian.[1] It was in the interest of antithesis that Van
Til published his first major book on the "Crisis Theology" of Barth
and Brunner, entitled The New Modernism, hoping to alert the Christian
church to the fact that Barth's dialectical theology was fundamentally one with
modernistic theology -- and that "the new Modernism and the old alike are
destructive of historic Christian theism and with it of the significant meaning
of human experience."[2]
It was
with the interest of a proper understanding of antithesis that Van Til, in the
next year, published his second book on the subject of Common Grace,
where the fundamental premise was that "the believer and the non-believer
differ at the outset of every self-conscious investigation."[3] And perhaps the most memorable section of Van
Til's basic text in apologetics, The Defense of the Faith, is precisely
his treatment of the mock dialogue in which Mr. Grey, the evangelical
apologist, does not appreciate, to his detriment, the significance of the
philosophical antithesis between belief and unbelief.[4]
This
theme of the principial, epistemological and ethical antithesis between the
regenerate, Bible-directed mind of the Christian and the autonomous mind of the
sinner (whether expressed by the avowed unbeliever or by the unorthodox modern
theologian), remained part of Van Til's distinctive teaching throughout his
career. Indeed, his festschrift bears the pertinent title Jerusalem
and Athens -- based on Tertullian's famous antithetical quip "what
indeed has Athens to do with Jerusalem? What concord is there between the
Academy and the Church?"
In his
own essay for that volume, entitled "My Credo," Van Til condensed his
conception of apologetics, guided by the thought of antithesis, into a
concluding summary, where he wrote:
My own proposal, therefore, for a
consistently Christian methodology of apologetics is this... That we no longer
make an appeal to "common notions" which the Christian and
non-Christian agree on, but to the "common ground" which they
actually have because man and his world are what Scripture says they are. That
we... set the non-Christian principle of the rational autonomy of man against
the Christian principle of the dependence of man's knowledge on God's knowledge
as revealed in the person and by the Spirit of Christ. That we claim,
therefore, that Christianity alone is reasonable for men to hold...That we
argue, therefore, by "presupposition."[5]
The aim
of the present discussion is to address the subject of the antithetical nature
of Christianity and its significance for apologetics. It was one of the burdens
of Van Til's later work, Toward a Reformed Apologetics, to urge Reformed
apologists not to be philosophical (or speculative) first, then Biblical
afterwards. Rather, said Van Til, if we would be true to the Christ of the
Scriptures, we must first listen to his word in the Bible and from that
starting point proceed to think through all philosophical issues. Van Til ended
this pamphlet with these words:
Rather
than wedding Christianity to the philosophies of Aristotle or Kant, we must
openly challenge the apostate philosophic constructions of men by which they
seek to suppress the truth about God themselves, and the world...It is only if
we demand of men complete submission to the living Christ of the Scriptures in
every area of their lives that we have presented to men the claims of the Lord
Christ without compromise. It is only then that we are truly Biblical first and
speculative afterwards. Only then are we working toward a Reformed
apologetic.[6]
Following
Van Til's exhortation, I will begin with a survey of the Biblical view of the
antithesis between believer and unbeliever.
1. The Antithesis is Crucial to the Biblical
Understanding of Man
A. The Biblical Narrative
1. Geneis
3:15 -- We read in this verse, "I will put enmity between you [Satan]
and the woman, and between your seed and her seed; he shall bruise your head,
and you will bruise his heel." A correct view of man, his historical
setting and problem, and God's resultant relationship to man is tied up with
the Biblical presentation of man's Fall and God's response to it. Genesis 3:15
is often designated the protoevangelium, the first proclamation of good
news for man's salvation. However, that good news of the victorious
confrontation of the Saviour with Satan cannot be understood except against the
background of what precedes it. There is preceding it, of course, (1) the fact
that man's guilty conscience created alienation between him and his wife, as
well as a desire to flee from the presence of God (vv. 7-8), and (2) the fact
that God's curse was pronounced against the serpent precisely because he dared
to beguile man into repudiating the self-establishing authority of God's word
(v.14). Both of these facts point to the spiritual antithesis inherent in the
present human situation.
But more
pointedly, the antithesis is explicitly declared by God in verse fifteen, where
He said that He "will put enmity" between the seed of the
woman and the seed of the serpent -- between the children of God (who are
united with their Savior, the Messiah: cf. Gal. 3:16,29) and the children of
the devil (cf. John 8:44). It is worth noting that the emphasis falls upon the
word "enmity" as the first word in the Hebrew of Genesis 3:15
("Enmity will I put"). And God himself is said to constitute,
establish, and deliberately impose this enmity between men.
The
opposition and antithesis between followers of God and followers of Satan is
not simply predicted by God and is not simply commanded; it is sovereignly
inflicted as God's judicial curse. The distinction and antipathy between the
two seeds must and indeed will be maintained. Only in that light do we properly
understand and hope in the Messiah's crushing defeat of the tempter. Were that
antithesis disregarded, diluted or dispelled, the very meaning of the gospel of
salvation would be lost -- either by consigning all men indiscriminately to the
perdition of Satan, or by neglecting the discriminating love of God, which Paul
says in Colossians 1:13, "delivered us out of the power of darkness and
transferred us into the kingdom of His beloved son."
The
entire Biblical message of redemption and the historical establishing of God's
kingdom both presuppose "the antithesis," then, between the people of
God and the culture of unbelief, between the regenerate and the unregenerate.
Therefore, throughout history Satan has tempted God's people to compromise
"the antithesis" -- whether by intermingling in ungodly marriages
(Gen. 5:2), or by showing unwarranted tolerance toward the enemies of God
(Joshua 23:11-13; Judges 1:21,27-36; Ps 106:34-35), or by departing from the
authority of God's word so that "every man does what is right in his own
eyes," (Judges 21:25), by committing spiritual adultery with other gods
(e.g. Ps. 106:36,39; Hosea 2:2-13, 4:12; Exek. 16:15-25), by trusting in some
power other than God (e.g. Kings 18:21; Chron. 16: 7-9; Isa 30:7, 31:1; Ezek
16:26-29), or by repudiating the Messiah along with the world (John 1:10-11),
or by bowing the knee both to Christ and to Caesar (cf. Acts 17:7; Rev
13:8,11-17).
In fact,
Satan even dared to tempt Jesus, the Son of God, to achieve God's ends by compromising
the antithesis with Satan himself. In Matt 4:8-10, you remember how Satan
showed Jesus the kingdoms of the world, and he said all of them would belong to
Jesus if He would just bow his knee to Satan. (Of course, they belonged to
Jesus anyway. Satan was proposing a shortcut.) So if we would live up to Paul's
assessment that Christians "are not ignorant of his [Satan's]
devices" (II Corinthians 2:11), then we must be sure not to ignore the
tempter's persistent device of suggesting that we can tone down or disregard
the antithesis which God has imposed between His people and the world.
2. Genesis
4 -- In the fourth chapter of Genesis, we read that Cain murdered his
brother, Abel, because God had respect unto Abel's offering instead of Cain's.
The antagonism between those who please God and those who do not was already at
work then in human history. And John tells us specifically that this event
illustrated the enmity which arises between the two seeds, for he says,
"Cain was of the evil one." He was of the seed of the serpent, and he
slew his brother precisely "because his works were evil and his brother's
righteous" (I John 3:12).
3. Subsequent
Portions of Genesis -- The antithesis continues to be pressed in the
literature of the Bible as the descendants of Cain and their accompanying
culture are now distinguished from those of Seth in the fourth Chapter of
Genesis. The family of Noah is set apart from the rest of mankind for
preservation through the flood in Genesis 5-9. The seed of Shem is set apart
from the seed of his brothers in Genesis 10. The ungodly attempt to unify all
mankind at the tower of Babel is thwarted by God in Genesis 11. Abraham and his
seed are specifically chosen out of all the other families of the earth in
Genesis 12-15. The line of Isaac is chosen over that of Ishmael in Genesis
16-18. The line of Jacob is chosen over that of Esau in Genesis 25.
4. Exodus
through Joshua -- Eventually the children of Israel are called out of the
land of Egypt, as the Book of Exodus shows us, to displace the Canaanite tribes
and be established as a holy people unto God (as we read in the Book of
Joshua).
Accompanying
these Biblical stories, we read repeatedly of the hostility which exists
between God's children and those of the world. We see this whether we look at
Ishmael's persecuting mockery of Isaac in Gen 21:9 (cf. Gal 4:29) or Pharoah's
harsh and murderous oppression of the Jewish slaves in Exod. 1:18-22 (cf. Heb.
11:23-27), or Israel's military campaigns against Canaan's abominable places of
worship in Deuteronomy 7:24-25, 12:2-3.
5. The
Psalms and Prophetic Literature -- The theme of antithesis thus runs
through the Biblical drama like a subtle, unifying thread. We hear the theme of
antithesis in the imprecatory psalms against God's enemies, and in the
prophetic denunciation of the nations, especially against the ruthless empires
of Assyria and Babylon which took God's chosen people into captivity.
6. The
Law -- The necessity of living in terms of "the antithesis" is
buttressed by the Mosaic laws' demand that God's chosen people be a
"holy" people, separated from pagan unbelief and practices (e.g.
Leviticus 11:44-45; I Pet 1:15-16). On this basis Peter says in the New
Testament that we are to be sanctified in all manner of living. It was
reiterated in the call of the prophets to "come out from among them and be
separate" and "touch no unclean thing," (Isa 52:11; Jer 31:1),
which is quoted by Paul in II Corinthians 6:17-7:1. We're to be cleansed from
all defilement of flesh and spirit. Now both of these moral injunctions assume
and endorse an antithesis between the lifestyle of believers and unbelievers,
and both injunctions are repeated for us in the New Testament. We had better
take them seriously.
7. The
New Testament -- In the New Testament we see further evidence of, and a
demand for, the antithesis between the church and the world. Jesus emphasized
and called for a clear observation of that antithesis when He proclaimed
"he who is not with me is against me." (Matt. 12:30), because, he
said, "no man can serve two masters" (Matt. 6:24). And Jesus
identified "the enemy," (that language is conspicuous), the enemy
of the Kingdom (Matt. 13:39), as Satan. Peter called him the believer's
"adversary" (I Pet. 5:8).
And Paul
utilized military imagery to rouse us to withstand the principalities and
powers and spiritual hosts of wickedness (Eph 6:10-17). There is, according to
the New Testament outlook, clearly a hostile encounter taking place in the
world.
A graphic
illustration of the antithesis, or enmity, between the seed of the serpent and
the seed which belongs to God, is found in the account of Elymas the sorcerer,
whom Paul denounced as "a son of the devil," because he
"opposed" the apostles by trying to turn aside Sergius Paulus from
the faith, and by always "perverting the right ways of the Lord"
(Acts 13).
We must
call Genesis 3:15 to mind again when Jesus calls those who oppose the kingdom
of God, "the sons of the evil one" (Matt. 13:38), and when Paul identifies
them as the "enemies" of Christ's cross who mind earthly things, in
contrast to the Christians' heavenly citizenship (Phil.3:18-20).
The
apostle John reinforces the necessity of the antithesis by issuing the
following command to believers in I John 2:15: "Love not the world...If
any man loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him." And James
drives home the antithesis pungently by declaring, "whoever would be a
friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God" (James 4:4).
To end
our short survey, we can finally observe that the antithesis will, once and for
all, be ultimately confirmed by the eternal separation of all men into either
heaven or hell, as Jesus taught in Matthew 25:31-33,40.
B. The Significance for Apologetics
The
primary significance for apologetics of the Biblical teaching that there is a
fundamental, everlasting and irreconcilable antithesis between the regenerate
and unregenerate is found in the observation that this antithesis applies just
as much to the mental life and conduct of men as it does to their other
affairs. The "enmity" between Satan's seed and God's seed which is
seminally spoken of in Genesis 3:15 is intellectual in nature, as well as
social, or familial, or economic, or military, or political, or what have you.
Consider
the words of Paul in Romans 8:7: "the mind of the flesh is enmity against
God; for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can it be."
The mentality of those who are unregenerate (those who are in the flesh) cannot
subject itself to the truth of God's Word. There is, then, no peace between the
mindset of the unbeliever and the mind of God (which believers seek to reflect,
cf. John 15:15; I Cor. 2:16). They are rather at "enmity" with each
other.
Paul
similarly describes the unregenerate, unreconciled spiritual condition of
unbelievers in Colossians 1:21, when he says "they are alienated and
enemies in their mind" (enemies in their mind) against God. The
"enmity" is specifically one which is worked out "in the
mind" or thinking of the unbeliever. The unbeliever is unable to be
subject to the law's greatest command, which is to "love the Lord your God
with all your heart, with all of your soul and with all of your mind"
(Matt. 22:36-37). Instead, the unbeliever "hates the wisdom and
instruction" of God, as Proverbs 1:7 puts it. Although the fear of the
Lord is the beginning -- the very starting point -- of knowledge, there is no
fear of God before the unbeliever's eyes (Rom 3:18). He is, as such, kept from
realizing any of the "treasures of wisdom and knowledge" which are
deposited in Christ. (Colossians 2:3) The unbeliever's intellectual enmity
against God is simultaneously his epistemological undoing.
Paul
concisely lays out the epistemological enmity of which we are speaking, and he
plainly points to its consequences, in Colossians 2:8 -- "take heed, lest
anyone rob you [that is, rob you of the wisdom of the treasures of knowledge
spoken of in verse three preceding] through his philosophy, even vain deceit,
which is after the traditions of men, after the rudimentary assumptions of the
world, and not after Christ." Here, Paul sets a philosophy which is
"after Christ" in antithesis to one that is "after worldly"
presuppositions (his word is "rudiments": the elementary principles
of learning) and human traditions. And Paul says that the latter will have the
effect of depriving those who maintain it of knowledge. Those who
"suppress the truth in unrighteousness," are not only "without
excuse" for their line of reasoning, but they also become "vain in
their reasoning, their senseless hearts being darkened" (Rom 1:18,20-21).'
Unbelieving philosophy is not "philosophy", (etymologically "the
love of wisdom") at all. The arguments of unregenerate men against the Christian
faith are thus only "the oppositions of knowledge falsely-so-called"
(I Tim 6:20), the foolish reasoning of those "that oppose themselves"
(II Tim 2:25) in the process of prosecuting their enmity or hostility against
God.
Now the
apologist must realize these implications and thereby seek to expose the utter
epistomologetical futility of the unbeliever's reasoning. Paul's challenge was
this : "Has not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?" (I Cor.
1:20). It was his conviction that, because the unregenerate mind is at enmity with
God s Word and Spirit -- and thus also with the thinking of God's people who
are "renewed in the spirit of their minds" (Ephesians 4:23) --
unbelievers, whether they are scholars or not, "walk in the vanity of
their mind, being darkened in their understanding, alienated from the
life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardening
of their hearts." If ever there was an indictment, line after line, Paul
gives it in Ephesians 4:17-18.
The
defender of the faith who is faithful to the Biblical faith he defends, will
not seek to abandon or diminish the crucial antithesis which exists between the
philosophical reasoning of the regenerate mind and the self-destructive
reasoning of the unregenerate mind. He will, as Paul says in II Corinthians
10:5, "cast down reasonings and every lofty thing exalted against the
knowledge of God, taking every thought captive to the obedience of
Christ." The antithesis must be central and indispensable to the work of
the apologist as an ambassador for Christ in the intellectual arena, who
beseeches men to be reconciled to God (II Corinthians 5:20).
2. But Modern Thought Disregards and Disdains the
Antithesis
The
spirit of our age or culture, however, is not only antithetical to the
perspective of God's Spirit as generally revealed in the Scriptures; it is in
particular antithetical to the Biblical view of antithesis itself. The enmity
or antithesis between the regenerate and unregenerate mind, as presaging the
final antithesis of heaven and hell is renounced by the modern spirit in the
hope that all the world might some day "live as one."
This
erasing of the antithesis was the motivating theme and arousing sentiment of
the song popularized by ex-Beatle John Lennon, in which he proposed,
"Imagine there's no heaven; it's easy if you try, no hell below us, above
us only sky. Imagine all the people living for today." The song went on to
preach that we should imagine that there is no country, no possessions, and
"no religion too" -- so that we might finally achieve a
"brotherhood of man" where any and all antithesis, especially that
proclaimed by the Bible, will be eliminated forever in a social, political,
economical and religious monism of perpetual peace. It all begins, sings the
modern siren, by imagining that there is no heaven and no hell. The
God-ordained antithesis must not be conceded.
Even
where the expression of the modern spirit is not as pronounced or poetic as
John Lennon's song, we see the subtle disregard for the Biblical antithesis
exhibited around us everyday in the media. The contemporary spirit is one of
egalitarian democracy and enlightened tolerance, and these attributes are
nothing if not meant to be all encompassing. It is not enough that political
democracy permits one to believe as he sees fit; there is as well the
"epistemological democracy" which insists that no belief-system is
inherently superior to any other.
The
Biblical antithesis between light and darkness, between God-honoring wisdom and
God-defying foolishness, between the mind of the Spirit and the mind of the
flesh is an offense to the modern mentality. Nobody has the warrant to deem his
perspective as more authoritative or imbued with any special epistemological
privilege over others. All philosophical points of view must be rendered equal
honor as worthy of our attention and having something worthwhile to contribute
to our thinking. We must respect each other.
Accordingly,
our age is characterized by intellectual pluralism and the spirit of rapprochement,
not at all by a recognition of, or a regard for, a categorical antithesis
between Christian and non-Christian viewpoints.
The
result of neglecting the God-ordained perspectival antithesis between
Christianity and the world is, as one might naturally expect, a failure of
nerve in maintaining any distinctive and unqualified religious truth, a truth
which would stand out clearly against every view which falls short of it or
runs counter to it. "Nobody is wrong if everybody is right" has
become the unwitting operating premise of modern theology.
The
cognitive agnosticism of post-Kantian religious thought precludes identifying
any clear-cut line of demarcation between truth and error -- and renders the
advocating of one a disreputable social faux pas'. Modern theology is,
accordingly, simply loath to press the fundamental antithesis between
scholarship which submits to the revealed word of God and autonomous reasoning
which either ignores or denies it. The inevitable result of suppressing this
antithesis is that Christian theology loses its basic character and joins hands
with what should be its very opposite: religious relativism. That is what has
transpired in our age of anti-antithesis. For instance, there are no
genuine "heretics" in the thinking of modern theologians -- for the
same reason there are no citations for indecent exposure in a nudist colony:
viz., the preconditions for making those charges simply do not hold.
This is
candidly illustrated by the text which I consider the most thorough and
descriptively competent survey available for contemporary theology and
philosophy of religion, one that was written by no less a scholar than the Lady
Margaret Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford. In his book, Twentieth
Century Religious Thought, John Macquarrie demonstrates a remarkable
familiarity with the wide-ranging scope of philosophical trends which have
interfaced with religious reflection since 1900.
Macquarrie
has undoubtedly mastered the field of modern theological thought, and
admittedly his insights and evaluations of particular themes or particular
authors are often beneficial. But what has Macquarrie learned from all this?
What conclusion would he draw from his study of twentieth-century religious
thought? He is quite open about that matter in his chapter on "Concluding
Comments" in the first subsection, entitled, "Some Findings and
Suggestions." The Oxford scholar writes:
Our
survey, however, has undoubtedly pointed us in the direction of a degree of
relativism. Absolute and final truth on the questions of religion is just
unattainable...Although absolute truth is denied us, we can have partial
insights of varying degrees of adequacy, glimpses that would make us less
forlorn...
What we
are driving at is that just as we have no absolute answers, so we have no absolute
questions, in which everything would be noticed at once. Only God could ask or
answer such questions. Our questions arise out of our situation, and both
questions and answers are relative to that situation. This need not distress us
for it could not be otherwise -- it is part of what it means to be finite.
[We] have
seen, there are many possible ways of understanding religion, and...no one way
is likely to be the final truth...This is the situation in which finite man has
got to make up his mind -- an agonizing situation, if you like but also a
challenging and adventurous one. So Kierkegaard viewed Christianity -- not as a
cozy convention but as a decision to be taken and a leap to be made.[7]
Macquarrie,
who I think is representative of the modern mentality, is unwilling to
countenance the radical antithesis (the God-imposed enmity) between belief
grounded in God's holy Word and unbelief. At best he sees the theological
situation as a "dialogue among free men" who, adrift together in
religious relativism and uncertainty, must make an adventuresome
"leap" of faith since there is no "final truth" regarding
religion for us or finite creatures whose thinking is dependent upon our local
situation. Of course, as Macquarrie recognizes, God himself might provide
"absolute answers" which would lift us above our human limitations.
And Macquarrie is well aware that, "some theologians talk of a divine revelation
to which they have access," but then he promptly dismisses that
"dogmatic and arrogant" perspective (due to difficulties connected
with interpreting the revelation).
The farce
in all this, I hope, is only too apparent. Macquarrie himself is no less
dogmatic and arrogant in pronouncing that "absolute and final truth"
on religious questions is "just unattainable." He is absolute in his
declaration that nothing is absolute! On the question of religious insight,
Macquarrie s own final truth is that there can be no final truth. This flagrant
contradiction complements the subtle, but just as real, contradiction in his
statement that "varying degrees of adequacy" can be recognized in
different religious insights, despite the fact that "absolute truth"
is denied us. When a final truth or religious standard is ruled out, on what
basis could anyone judge the "degree" of approximation to the truth
in any proposed religious idea? What kind of "adequacy" does
Macquarrie expect religious insights to achieve, if not adequacy regarding
their veracity? (Is it a religious truth that truth is irrelevant to religious
adequacy?) The modern mind prefers such unpardonable lapses of intellectual
cogency to the fearsome antithesis which an absolute divine revelation would
represent and necessitate.
Dr. Van
Til taught us that the tendency toward irrationalism in modern thought (the
tendency toward skepticism, uncertainty, relativism, the acceptance of
incoherence) is in fact allied with the tendency toward autonomous rationalism
in modern thought (the tendency to exalt man's natural intellect as a final
judge using the standards of logic and science). The reflective modern man
wants it both ways: his intellect is adequate and authoritative, but not really
adequate enough or finally authoritative. The arrogant demands of rationalism
are counter-balanced by the humble concessions of irrationalism, and then the
humble misgivings of irrationalism are shored up by the assurances of
rationalism. Van Til pointed out that, ironically, the two tendencies toward
rationalism and irrationalism actually call for each other:
There is
nothing surprising in the fact that modern man is both utterly irrationalist
and utterly rationalist at the same time. He has to be both in order to be
either. And he has to be both in order to defend his basic assumption of his
own freedom or ultimacy...The determinists and rationalists are what they are
in the interest of defending the same autonomy of freedom of man that the
indeterminists and rationalists are defending[8]
The
non-Christian presupposes a dialectic between "chance" and
"regularity," the former accounting for the origin of matter and
life, the latter accounting for the current success of the scientific
enterprise...The non-Christian...attempts nevertheless to use "logic"
to destroy the Christian position. On the one hand, appealing to the non-rationality
of "matter," he says that the chance-character of "facts"
is conclusive evidence against the Christian position. Then, on the other hand,
he maintains like Parmenides that the Christian story cannot possibly be true.
Man must be autonomous, "logic" must be legislative as to the field
of "possibility," and possibility must be above God[9]
And this
is precisely what we see in the example of Dr. Macquarrie. Leaning toward irrationalism,
he rules out absolute or final truth in religion, affirms that all of our
questions and answers are relative, says we must be content with a leap of
faith, and settles for glaring contradictions in the course of telling us so.
He then turns around on the very next page and asserts an autonomous rationalism
as his intellectual guide:
Our
understanding of religion should be a reasonable one. By this is not
meant that some conclusive proof is to be given, for we have already rejected
the possibility of absolute certitude...In asking for a reasonable
understanding of religion, we simply mean that it should involve no sacrificium
intellectus, no flagrant contradictions, no violation of natural reason, no
conflict with what we believe about the world on scientific or common-sense
grounds.[10]
This
conspicuous exhibition of the rational-irrational tension in the thinking of a
learned, modern thinker is pertinent to our subject matter in this discussion,
for we can discern here the same suppression of antithesis on both
sides of Macquarrie's dialectic. On the irrationalist side, there can be
no antithesis between divine truth and rebellious unbelief, for all religious
insights are relative; all men are together in the same situation: a common
dialogue where final and absolute truth is unattainable. Likewise, on the rationalist
side of the dialectic, there can be no antithesis between divine truth and
rebellious unbelief, for (again) all men are together in the same situation:
refusing to sacrifice the autonomy of their "intellect," honoring the
demands of "natural" reason and "common" sense, and never
believing anything contrary to what "we" (any man) believe(s) about
the world on the basis of (generic) "science." All men alike, whether
servants or enemies of Jesus Christ, are lumped together by Macquarrie in his
rationalist methodology (autonomous intellect is judge), even as they are
lumped together in his irrationalist conclusion (there is no final truth). A
fundamental religious antithesis in method and conclusion cannot be recognized
by him.
A similar
rejection of antithesis is found in the writings of one of the leading
analytical philosophers of our age, Stephen Toulmin. In Toulmin's The Return
to Cosmology, which addresses the interplay of science and the theology of
nature, Toulmin argues, in the face of the modern antagonism to the idea, that
questions of the universe as a whole and man's place in it should not be dismissed.
Toulmin wants to return to comprehensive questions about the nature of the
universe as a whole, to cosmological reflection which benefits from the dual
input of natural science and religious philosophy.
At the
very end of the book, where he discusses "The Future Cosmology," he
makes the following observation: "If there is to be a renewal of contacts
between science and theology along the lines suggested here -- if the
cosmological presuppositions involved in talking about the overall scheme of
things are to be scrutinized jointly from both sides of the fence -- we shall
quickly encounter some knotty problems of jurisdiction."[11] Toulmin is sharp enough to realize that
"sectarian" disagreement and doctrinal particularism stand in the way
of developing an effective, common cosmology in terms of which men can agree
about their place and responsibility in the universe. The cosmology whose
pursuit he endorses, therefore, is one which will not offend "the natural
reason" of man. In the second to last paragraph of his book he writes:
Yet does this put us in a
position to claim, quite baldly, that the entire scheme of Creation by which
our moral and religious ideas are to be guided is transparent to "the
natural reason" without regard for the doctrinal considerations of
particular religions and sects? Preachers who exhort good Christians to let
their Christianity permeate all their thinking, so that they may even end up
with (say a "Christian arithmetic") invite Leibniz's objection that
arithmetic is just not like that -- even God himself cannot alter, or
contravene, the truths of mathematics. And, if we were told that good
Christians must subscribe to a different science of ecology from other people,
a parallel objection might well be pressed. God intervenes in the World
(Leibniz declared) within the realm of grace, not within the realm of nature.
So perhaps the time has come to take our courage in both hands, and declare for
a fully common and ecumenical theology of nature.[12]
Toulmin
is willing to return to cosmological thinking, just so long as any
antithesis between a Christian theology of nature and any non-Christian
conception is ruled out in advance. The Christian perspective is to be confined
to the realm of grace, not allowed to create sectarian disputes within the
realm of nature. The last thing that the modern mind is willing to accept is a
distinctively Christian mathematics, a distinctively Christian natural science,
a distinctively Christian anything. No special place may be afforded the
Christian perspective. "The antithesis" must be removed if Christians
are to dialogue with other religionists, philosophers, or scientists. Everyone
must be respected for having a perspective which contributes to the rich
understanding of this ultimately mysterious universe.
Toulmin
immediately states that his fully ecumenical enterprise -- what he calls a
"theology of nature accessible to the common reason" will not bring
universal support due to the intolerance of "fundamentalist
theology." But, even if it did, if all perspectives would accept the rationalist
requirement of a common, autonomous intellectual method, would Toulmin's
ecumenical theology of nature prove successful? Would it bring us an assured
knowledge of the grand scheme of things and man's place in the universe? In the
very last paragraph of his book, Toulmin asks, "Just how far, then, can
the natural reason alone inform us in detail about what the overall scheme of
things -- the cosmos, or Creation -- really is?" His answer (or
non-answer) ends the book: "We have reached the threshold of some
painfully difficult and confusing questions, but answering them is a task for
the future."[13]
Toulmin,
the philosopher, has thus returned -- along with the theologian Macquarrie --
to the irrationalist modern tendency toward uncertainty and skepticism. The
questions are so tough that nobody can really know for sure. The substitute for
a distinctively Christian answer turns out to be, as always, the eschatological
cop-out invoked by autonomous thought: answering the ultimate questions must
ever remain a task for the future.
The
modern repudiation of the antithesis between the regenerate and unregenerate
minds, between the Christian worldview and its competitors, is itself (ironically)
a reiteration of that very antithesis. Macquarrie's promotion of religious
relativism and Toulmin's rejection of any distinctively Christian cosmology
both take their stand over against the Christ speaking in the Scriptures.
Contrary to the thesis proclaimed by Christ, the modern man asserts its
anti-thesis. The God-ordained "enmity" between belief and unbelief
(cf. Genesis 3:15) cannot ever be successfully overcome. In its effort to
supplant it, unbelieving scholarship simply ends up supporting it.
However,
that such a vain effort to eliminate antithesis between Biblical Christianity
and its opponents is made by worldly scholars should come as no surprise. After
all, respect for, and condoning of, that antithesis would be implicitly
self-condemning. John 3:20 tells us that it is precisely an escape from God's
condemnation which unbelievers seek.
The
remarkable thing is that even professedly "Christian" scholars would
likewise make the vain effort to eliminate the antithesis between Biblical
philosophy and unbiblical speculation.
The
penchant of modern theologians and churchmen to ignore the inherent antagonism
between the perspective of God's holy word and the perspectives developed by
men who suppress or dispute Biblical truth agonized Van Til to the depth of his
God-fearing soul. By stressing commonality rather than conflict, such
theologians surely find themselves more pleasing to men, said Van Til, but they
do so at the price of coming under the displeasure of God -- the God who, in
the garden of Eden, Himself imposed the inescapable enmity between His people
and the world.
Thus in The
Great Debate Today, Van Til eschewed the lead of liberal and neo-orthodox
pundits in order to follow Augustine, teaching that the "City of God"
and the "city of man" stand over against one another in their total
outlook with respect to the whole course of history. In the Reformed Pastor
and Modern Thought,[14] Van Til argued against the apostate and man
centered ecumenism of contemporary speculation -- an ecumenism which, to be
consistent, must acknowledge that even the radically anti-Christian proposals
of Teilhard de Chardin and the God-is-dead proponents (about whom, see Van
Til's analyses in separate pamphlets from 1966), should not be kept out of the
church (cf. Toward a Reformed Apologetics). In books such as The
Sovereignty of Grace[15] and The New Hermeneutic,[16] Van Til warned against the synthesis between
Christianity and post-Kantian thought which is the dangerous drift in the
teaching of the later Berkouwer and Kuitert.
We cannot
help but notice, then, that the message of antithesis is disregarded by worldly
thinkers and theologians of perspectival synthesis. However, the one who above
all wishes to see a dissolving of the antithesis of regenerate and unregenerate
thinking in favor of synthesis, ecumenism, and a "common faith" of an
autonomous or humanistic character is the one upon whom that antithesis was originally
pronounced as a curse -- Satan himself (cf. Genesis 3:14-15). This is, in fact,
his most effective tool against the redemptive plan of God and the maturation
of the Messiah's kingdom. This is his "last, best hope" that the
gates of hell might after all prevail against the church of Christ (cf. Matt.
16:18), for according to philosophical reflection which disregards the
antithesis between the "two seeds," there is in principle no
necessity for a fundamental clash between the church and hell's gates anyway.
Satan gladly works through the polemics of autonomous philosophers and
relativistic, ecumenical theologians to badger or tempt God's people to
compromise "the antithesis" in their reasoning and scholarship, and
he would especially have us lay aside any theoretical or practical application
of the fact that the unbeliever's "enmity" against God and His people
comes to expression precisely in his intellectual life or thinking. Satan does
so just because the Bible's message of redemption, as well as the historical work
of Christ and His Spirit in establishing God's kingdom, both presuppose a
powerful, systematically basic and intrinsic antithesis between the cultures of
regenerate and unregenerate men.
[At this
point in the original lecture, Dr. Bahnsen enters into an extended critique of
Francis Schaeffer's notion of antithesis. Bahnsen argues that "one might
think, then, that we would welcome any Christian scholar or writer who makes
the summons back to antithesis central to his encounter with modern culture.
But, this is not entirely the case. In a rather odd way, some conceptions of
the antithesis can unwittingly, but, nevertheless, truly work to undermine the
very antithesis which is presented in and essential to the Biblical
viewpoint...this is what we find the case of Francis Schaeffer's apologetical
work and writings."
Moreover,
Bahnsen argues, Schaeffer not only offers a false conception of antithesis, but
he also seriously misconstrues the nature and importance of the philosophy of
Hegel. Schaeffer embarrassingly imputes various blatantly
"unHegelian" views to Hegel. Christian scholarship must rise above
this sort of mistake. Antithesis will publish Dr. Bahnsen's important
critique of Schaeffer in its June/July issue (Vol. I, No.3, 1990).]
3. The Systematic Nature of Antithesis
In terms
of theoretical principle and eventual outworking, the unbeliever opposes the
Christian faith with a whole antithetical system of thought, not simply
with piecemeal criticisms. His attack is aimed, not at random points of
Christian teaching, but at the very foundation of Christian thinking. The
particular criticisms which are utilized by an unbeliever rest upon his basic,
key assumptions which unify and inform all of his thinking. And it is this
presuppositional root which the apologist must aim to eradicate, if his defense
of the faith is to be truly effective.
Abraham
Kuyper well understood that all men conduct their reasoning and their thinking
in terms of an ultimate controlling principle -- a most basic presupposition.
For the unbeliever, this is a natural or naturalistic principle, in terms of
which man's thinking is taken to be intelligible without recourse to God. For
the believer, it is a supernatural principle based on God's involvement in
man's history and experience, notably in regeneration -- perspective that
provides the framework necessary for making sense of anything. These two
ultimate commitments -- call them naturalism and Christian supernaturalism --
are logically incompatible and seek to cancel each other out. They must, as
Kuyper argued in Principles of Sacred Theology, create "two kinds
of science," where each perspective (in principle) contradicts whatever
the other perspective says and denies to it the noble name of
"science."[17] The natural principle develops its science,
and the supernatural principle develops its science -- and the two will not
honor each other as being genuine sciences. And thus the unbeliever is bent on
distorting, reinterpreting, or rejecting any evidence or argumentation which is
set forth in support of, or which is controlled by, the believer's ultimate
commitment. To be consistent, the unbeliever cannot even allow for the possibility
that the Christian proclamation is true.
There are
two fundamentally different worldviews in terms of which men conduct their
thinking and in terms of which they understand the use of reason itself.
Let's
just take that word "reason" for a moment. In the generic sense
"reason" simply refers to man's intellectual or mental capacity.
Christians believe in reason, and non-Christians believe in reason; they both
believe in man's intellectual capacity. However, for each one, his view of
reason and his use of reason is controlled by the worldview within which reason
operates. A worldview is, very simply, a network of presuppositions which is
not verified by the procedures of natural science, but in terms of which every
aspect of man's knowledge and experience is interpreted and interrelated.
The
unbeliever's worldview, according to Kuyper, is characterized by being
autonomous. That is, it is characterized by self-sufficiency or an independence
from outside authority, especially any transcendent authority (one that originates
beyond man's temporal experience or exceeds man's temporal experience). The
autonomous man, as Van Til puts it, wants to be "a law unto himself."
And this leads, then, to what our society calls, "secularism" or
"humanism:" the view that man is the highest value, as well as the
highest authority, in terms of knowledge and behavior, rather than some
transcendent reality or transcendent revelation. Rationalism is humanistic or
autonomous in its basic character, maintaining the general attitude that man's autonomous
reason is his final authority -- in which case divine revelation may be denied
or ignored in whatever area a person is studying.
4. Antithesis in Apologetic Method
Now
because the unbeliever has such an implicit system of thought or worldview --
an autonomous, rationalistic, secular worldview -- directing his attack on the
faith, the Christian can never be satisfied to defend the hope that is in him
by merely stringing together isolated evidences which offer a slight
probability of the Bible's veracity. Each particular item of evidence --
whether it is historical evidence as John Warwick Montgomery wants to present,
or logical evidence as Alvin Plantinga wants to present, or existential
evidence like Francis Schaeffer was very adept at presenting -- each particular
item of evidence will be evaluated by the unbeliever (as to both its
truthfulness and its degree of probability) by that unbeliever's tacit
assumptions. His general world-and-life-view will provide the context in
which the evidential claim is understood and weighed.
For this
reason the apologetical strategy that we see illustrated in Scripture calls for
argumentation at the presuppositional level. When all is said and done,
it is worldviews that we need to be arguing about, not simply evidences or
experiences. When Paul stood before Agrippa and offered his defense for the
hope that was in him, he declared the public fact of Christ's resurrection. We
see that in Acts 26:2,6-7. There is no doubt that Paul was adamant to proclaim
the public facto of the resurrection of Christ: "for the King knows of
these things unto whom also I speak freely; for I am persuaded that none of
these things are hidden from him, for this has not been done in the
corner" (v.26). However, what you must make note of is the
presuppositional groundwork and context which Paul provided for his appeal to
fact. The very first point Paul endeavored to make in his defense of the
faith was not an observational truth about what was a public fact, but rather a
pre-observational point (something that preceded observation and is not
based on observation) -- a transcendental matter (about what is possible).
Thus we read in verse eight: "Why is it judged impossible with you
that God should raise the dead?" Paul wanted to deal first of all with the
question of pre-observational worldview -- what is possible and what is
impossible -- and in terms of that he dealt with the historical fact of
Christ's resurrection.
God was
taken as the sovereign determiner of what can and what cannot happen in
history. Paul then proceeded to explain that the termination of hostility to
the message of the resurrection requires not that we consult more eyewitnesses,
but rather requires submission to the Lordship of Jesus Christ (vv.9,15).
"I verily thought with myself that I ought to do many things contrary to
the name of Jesus of Nazareth..." [later] "I said, Who art thou Lord?
And the Lord said, I am Jesus whom thou persecuteth." There was an
antithesis that Jesus sovereignly overcame in Paul's life. The unbeliever, like
Paul, must understand who the genuine and ultimate authority is: It is Jesus
whom the unbeliever would persecute. Paul went on to explain that the message
he declared called for a "radical change of mind." That is,
etymologically, what metanoeo means -- the changing, the turning around
of, the mind -- turning from darkness to true light, from the domination of
Satan to God, as Paul says in verses 18-20. The unbeliever must renounce his
antagonistic reasoning and embrace a new system of thought. His mind
must be turned around, and thus his presuppositional commitments must be
altered.
Finally
we notice that Paul placed his appeal to the fact of the resurrection within
the context of Scripture's authority to pronounce and interpret what happens in
history, verses 22-23: "Having therefore obtained the help that is from
God I stand unto this day testifying both to small and great, saying nothing
but what the prophets and Moses did say should come: how that the Christ must
suffer, and that He first by the resurrection of the dead should proclaim light
both to the people and the Gentiles." In verse 27, Paul says, "King
Agrippa, do you believe the prophets?"
Paul's
apologetic did not deal with just isolated evidences. He dealt with
transcendental matters (what is possible), with ultimate authority ("it is
Jesus you are persecuting"), with Scripture, ("don't you believe the
prophets?"). The ultimate ground of the Christian certainty and the
authority that backs up his argumentation must be the Word of God. Paul could
go to the facts then, but only in terms of an undergirding philosophy of
fact and in accordance with the foundational presuppositions of a Biblical
epistemology.
We see
that most clearly when Paul went to Athens and there met the learned unbelievers
of his day -- the philosophers in the capital city of philosophy, Athens. On
Mars hill, (actually before the Areopagus council, I believe) Paul defended his
Christian faith, as we read in Acts 17. We must make special note of what Acts
17 says. Paul pressed the antithesis, and Luke draws that to our attention.
Acts
17:16 tells us that Paul was provoked at the idolatry of that city. The
citizens who heard the disputation of Paul disdained him as an intellectual
scavenger, some sort of pseudo philosopher (v. 18). They called him a
"seed picker," someone who just stands around and picks up scraps
here and there. "This man is no real philosopher." And so as
verse 32 tells us, in the end they mocked him. Here is Paul provoked at
idolatry. Here are the idolators mocking Paul. This does not look like
commonality; it looks like conflict. We need to see that Paul did not bring
with him common philosophical perspectives that he shared with Plato and
Aristotle, or more particularly with the Stoic and Epicurean philosophers.
Rather, they saw him as bringing something "new" and something
"strange," (vv. 19, 20). It was just because they saw a difference
with Paul that he was scrutinized by the Areopagus council.
When Paul
appeared before the council he did not ask the philosophers to simply add a bit
more information to their systems. He rather challenged the controlling
presuppositions of those very systems. And as verse 30 says, he ended by
calling them (as he did Agrippa) to "repentance," to a change of
mind, not just to the supplementation of what they already believed.
Paul
recognized their strange religiosity, their "superstitious" ways (as
verse 22 puts it). In verse 23 admittedly Paul says, "you worship what you
admit is unknown." Over against this, Paul set forth his ability to
declare the divine truth against their ignorance. Consider verse 23 in Acts 17.
Paul put this very antithetically: "what therefore you worship in
ignorance, this I set before you," -- i.e., what you don't know about, I have
the ability, I have the position and the authority to declare to you. And when
you look at what Paul said to the Areopagus council, if you have any knowledge
of ancient Greek philosophy (especially that of the Stoics and Epicureans) you
will notice that virtually everything Paul said stands over against the
philosophical themes and premises of these schools of thought.
But now
someone will say, nevertheless, that it is in this particular apologetical
encounter where we see Paul explicitly making common cause with the
philosophers because in verses 27 and 28 he cites them in favor of the
Christian message! In Acts 17:27, speaking of all men seeking God (or that they
should seek God if aptly they might feel after Him and find Him) Paul says
"though He is not far from each one of us, for in Him we live and move and
have our being as certain even of your own poets have said; we are also
His offspring." Doesn't Paul then make common cause with the Greek
philosophers at this particular point?
What Paul
actually says in these verses though is that men will try to seek God, "if
perhaps they might feel after Him." The subordinate clause that is used in
that particular verse expresses an unlikely contingency; it's not likely that
they are going to seek after God. Indeed Paul tells us in Rom 3 that
"there is none that seek God; they have all turned aside and become
unprofitable." But even if they should seek after God, Paul says
that what they do is "grope" or feel after Him. The Greek word that
is used is the same word used by Homer for the groping around of the blinded
cyclops. Plato used that word for what he called amateur guesses at the truth.
Paul says, even if men might seek after God, their groping in darkness, their
amateur guesses, give no authority to what they are doing. And so far from
showing what Lightfoot thought was a clear appreciation of the elements of
truth contained in their philosophy, at Athens Paul taught that the eyes of the
unbeliever are blinded to the light of God's revelation. As he says in
Rom 1, unbelievers have a knowledge of God, but it's one that they suppress,
thereby meriting God's condemnation. Commenting on this, the earlier Berkouwer,
writes: "The antithesis looms larger in every encounter with heathendom.
It is directed, however, against the maligning that heathendom does to the
revealed truth of God in nature, and it calls for conversion to the revelation
of God in Christ."[18]
Then in
verse 27, Paul explains that this inept groping of the unbeliever is not due to
any deficiency in God -- not due to any deficiency in God's revelation. Verse
28 begins with the word "for." It is offering a clarification, an
illustration, of the statement that God is quite near at hand, even for
blinded, pagan thinkers. If perhaps they might grope after Him, Paul says, God
is not far from any one of us. And how do you know that? Well, you see, even
pagans like yourselves are able to say things which are formally true.
The
strange idea that these quotations of the pagan philosophers stand as proof, in
the same way as Biblical quotations do for Paul elsewhere in Acts, is not only
contrary to Paul's decided emphasis in his theology upon the unique authority
of God's Word, but it simply will not comport with the context of the Areopagus
address, where the groping, unrepentant ignorance of pagan religiosity is
forcefully declared.
Paul was
quoting the pagan writers not to enlist their support, not to make
common cause with them, but to manifest their guilt. Since God is near
at hand for all men, his revelation impinges on them continually, and they
can't escape the knowledge of Him as their Creator and as their Sustainer. And
what Paul says is that even your philosophers know this. Even pantheistic
Stoics are aware of, and obliquely express, God's nearness and man's dependence
upon Him. And so Paul quotes Epimenides and Aretus (who himself was repeating
Cleanthes' hymn to Zeus).
Knowing
the historical and philosophical context in which Paul spoke, and noting the
polemical thrusts of the Areopagus address, we can not accept any intrepreter's
hasty pronouncement to the effect that Paul "cites these teachings with
approval unqualified by allusion to a totally different frame of reference."
That is what Gordon Lewis says, arguing against Van Til's understanding of Acts
17.[19] Those who make these remarks eventually are
forced to acknowledge the qualification anyway. Lewis goes on to say that Paul
is not commending their Stoic doctrine and did not reduce his categories to
theirs. I think Berkouwer is correct here, when he says "There is no hint
here of a point of contact, in the sense of a preparation for grace, as though
the Athenians were already on the way to true knowledge of God."[20]
Berkouwer
says of Paul's quotation of the Stoics:
This is to be explained only in
connection with the fact that the heathen poets have distorted the truth of
God...Without this truth there would be no false religiousness. The should not
be confessed with the idea that false religion contains elements of the
truth and gets its strength from those elements. This kind of quantitative
analysis neglects the nature of the distortion carried on by false religion.
Pseudo religion witnesses to the truth of God in its apostasy.[21]
Surely
Paul was not committing the logical fallacy of equivocation, by using
pantheistically conceived premises to support a Biblically conceived theistic
conclusion. Rather Paul appealed to the distorted teaching of the pagan authors
as evidence that the process of theological distortion cannot fully rid men of
their natural knowledge of God. Certain expressions of the pagans thus manifest
this knowledge of God, but manifest it as suppressed -- as distorted.
Ned B. Stonehouse in his excellent discussion of the Areopagus address,
observed:
The
apostle Paul, reflecting upon their creaturehood, and their religious faith and
practice, could discover within their pagan religiosity evidences that the pagan
poets in the very act of suppressing and perverting the truth presupposed a
measure of awareness of it.[22]
And so
their own statements unwittingly convicted the pagan philosophers of the
knowledge of God, the knowledge they suppressed in unrighteousness. About these
pagan quotations, Van Til observed:
They
could say this adventitiously only. That is, that it would be in accord with
what they deep down in their hearts knew to be true in spite of their systems.
It was that truth which they sought to cover up by means of their professed
systems, which enabled them to discover truth as philosophers and scientists.[23]
Men are
engulfed by the revelation of God. Try as they may, the truth which they
possess in their heart of hearts cannot be escaped, and it will inadvertently
come to expression. They do not explicitly understand it properly (to be sure),
and yet those expressions are a witness to their inward conviction and their
culpability. Consequently, Paul could take advantage of pagan quotations, not
as an agreed upon ground for erecting the message of the gospel, but as a basis
for calling unbelievers to repentance for their flight from God.
In I
Corinthians 1:17, Paul says, "For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to
preach the gospel; not in the wisdom of words lest the cross of Christ should
be made void." Paul says that to use the unbeliever's worldly wisdom --
the wisdom of words in his apologetic -- would be to make void the word
of the cross. This is a very strong statement. Paul says he cannot make common
cause with worldly wisdom because, to the degree that he does the cross of
Christ is emptied of its meaning.
In II
Corinthians 11:3 Paul wrote "But I fear lest by any means as the serpent
beguiled Eve in his craftiness, your minds should be corrupted from the
simplicity and purity that is toward Christ." Paul wanted us to have our
minds free from corruption. He wanted us to be pure toward Christ, to have a
simple devotion to Him and not (like Eve) to be deceived by the serpent. We are
not to put our authority above the authority of God's Word or challenge it.
Paul, as
we have seen above then, could use facts or evidences in his apologetic. He
could quote unbelieving philosophers. But he never lost sight of the
presuppositional antithesis in defending the faith. The apologist needs to
recognize that because of "the antithesis," the debate between
believer and unbeliever is fundamentally a dispute or clash between two
complete world views, between ultimate commitments and assumptions which are
contrary to each other. An unbeliever is not simply an unbeliever at separate
points; his antagonism is rooted in an overall "philosophy" of life.
(As Paul says in Colossians 2:18, "beware lest any man take you captive
through his philosophy.") Two philosophies or two systems of thought are in
collision with each other. One submits to the authority of God's word as a
matter of presuppositional commitment; one does not. The debate between the two
perspectives will eventually work down to the level of one's ultimate
authority. The presuppositional apologist realizes that every argument chain
must end, and must end in a self-authenticating starting point. If the
starting point is not self-authenticating, the chain just goes on and on. Every
worldview has its unquestioned and its unquestionable assumptions, its
primitive commitments. Religious debate is always a question of ultimate
authority.
What is
the apologetical method that results from these observations? It will be
contrary to that method which we see in men like John Warwick Montgomery, Gordon
Clark, or even Francis Schaeffer. When worldviews collide the truly
presuppositional and antithetical approach will involve two steps. It will
involve first of all an internal critique of the unbeliever's philosophical
system, demonstrating that his outlook really is masking a foolish destruction
of knowledge. And then, secondly, it will call for a humble, yet bold,
presentation of the reason for the believer's presuppositional commitment to
God's Word. We see this illustrated in Proverbs 26:4-5. "Answer a fool
according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit." Show the fool
his folly -- where his thinking leads -- so he does not think he has anything
going for him, "lest he be wise in his own eyes." And then as
Proverbs says, "Don't answer a fool according to his folly, lest you be
like unto him," lest you end up in the same situation of destroying all
possibility of knowledge. In the apologist's case: lest you be like the fool,
don't answer him according to his folly, foolish presuppositions, but answer
him according to your own revealed presuppositions and outlook. Such a
procedure can resolve the tension, the debate, the antithesis, between
competing authorities and conflicting starting points because it asks, in
essence, which position provides the preconditions for observation in science,
for reasoning and logic, for absolutes in ethics, and for meaningful discourse
between the believer and the unbeliever. The presuppositional approach is
basically a setting out of the preconditions of intelligibility for all human
thinking.
In Toward
a Reformed Apologetic, Van Til puts it this way:
In seeking to follow the example
of Paul, Reformed Apologetics needs, above all else, to make clear from the
beginning that it is challenging the wisdom of the natural man on the authority
of the self-attesting Christ speaking in Scripture. Doing this the Reformed
apologist must place himself on the position of his "opponent," the
natural man, in order to show him that on the presupposition of human autonomy
human predication cannot even get underway. The fact that it has gotten
underway is because the universe is what the Christian, on the authority of
Christ, knows it to be. Even to negate Christ, those who hate him must be borne
up by Him.[24]
The
Christian, by placing himself on the unbeliever's position can show how it
results then in the destruction of intelligible experience and rational
thought. The unbeliever must be unmasked of his pretentions. Paul challenges
"where is the disputer of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of
this world?" (I Corinthians 1:18-20). The unbeliever must be shown that he
has "no apologetic" for his viewpoint (Rom 1:20). In Rom 1:20, Paul
says that unbelievers are left "without excuse," but etymologically
one could actually translate it into English that "they are without an
apologetic." They have no defense of the position they have taken.
Non-believers are left, as Paul says in Ephesians 4:17-24, with vain, darkened,
ignorant minds that need renewal. The Christian should then teach the
unbeliever that all wisdom and knowledge must take Jesus Christ as its
reference point (Colossians 2:3) -- that Jesus Christ is the self-validating
starting point of all knowledge. Christian apologists should press the
antithesis in debating with unbelievers.
5. Unbelievers Eventually at War With the Word
Jesus, of
course, categorically claimed to be the truth, "I am the way, the truth
and the life" (John 14:6). John himself reveals Christ as the very word,
the logos, of God (John 1:1). And thus Jesus, who categorically claims to be
the truth, Jesus who is the very word and logos of God, becomes the starting
point, the self-vindicating foundation of the Christian's worldview and
reasoning. Due to the antithesis between the believer and unbeliever, all
unbelieving reasoning must then take its stand in opposition to the Word
of God and to the truth of God. To put it briefly, the unbeliever must
be "at war with the Word."
The
unbeliever's enmity against the Word of God is not narrowly a religious matter.
Sometimes I think we understand this enmity as though the unbeliever just does
not like the religious idea of Jesus being the Son of God and our Saviour. But
far more, the unbeliever's enmity entails opposition to the very worldview
which is the context and foundation of any particular, Biblical message or
applications. Now since only the Christian worldview makes language and rationality
(logic) intelligible, unbelievers will be led, if they are consistent, to
oppose language and rationality themselves in order to oppose the Christian
worldview which alone sustains their intelligibility and possibility.
To put it
somewhat by way of pun, the unbeliever's war with the Word (that is to say,
their war with Scripture and Christ) will lead them to be at war with the word
-- all human language and meaning. Because they reject the transcendent Word of
God, Jesus, who is the very Truth of God, they are led in the immanent domain
to reject the idea of the word, meaning, truth, and logic as well. This is just
what we see, for instance, in the modern, literary Deconstructionist movement.
[At this
point in the original lecture, Dr. Bahnsen turns to criticize the contemporary
literary/philosophical movement known as Deconstructionism. Dr. Bahnsen uses
contemporary Deconstructionism as a primary example of the non-Christian
"war against the Word." Since Deconstructionists reject the transcendent
Word of God, they are led to war against the immanent "word" -- all
human language and meaning. Jacques Derrida and his disciples do this by
attempting to display the radical indeterminacy of linguistic meaning due to
the putative absence of any objective norms, universals, or Truth. Dr. Bahnsen
argues that Deconstructionism fails to meet its claims and is self-defeating.
Deconstructionism, nevertheless, is valuable in that it can be used to
demonstrate the failure of non-Christian viewpoints in general.]
Conclusion
The
conclusion I wish to draw from this discussion is that the
"antithetical" nature of Christianity calls for a presuppositional
method of defending the faith. According to Dr. Van Til, "the
antithesis" revealed in the Bible must be pressed with unbelievers in
order to guard Christianity's uniqueness, exclusivity, and indispensability.
First of all, the antithesis must be
pressed to guard Christianity's uniqueness. Christ cannot be presented to men
as simply another Bodhidsatva, another Avatar. He cannot be absorbed into a
larger philosophical coherence with other religions.
Secondly, Christianity must not be
presented to men as just a general axiom. It is rather an historical
particular. Christianity deals with a specific individual, the Christ of
history who did particular things at a particular time. It is not just a
philosophy understood in the idealist sense. John 14:6 tells us that there is
no other way to God. Acts 4:12 tells us that there is no other name under
Heaven whereby we must be saved. In Toward a Reformed Apologetic Van Til
says:
Romanism and Arminianism have, to
some extent, adjusted the gospel of the sovereign grace of God, so as to make
it please sinful man in his would-be independence of God. Romanism and
Arminianism have a defective theology. Accordingly, they also adjust their
method of reasoning with men so as to make it please sinful men. They also have
a defective apologetic. They tell the natural men that he has the right idea
about himself, the world and God so far as it goes, but that he needs some additional
information about these subjects.[25]
What Van
Til is getting at is that our task is not to show that Christianity does justice
to rationality and to the facts. Van Til says that Christianity alone saves
rationality and the facts. It is not simply better than the
non-Christian view, it is the the only option available to a rational
man. And for that reason the apologist does not need the autonomous man's
"favors." In The Intellectual Challenge of the Gospel, Van Til
declares:
Instead
of accepting the favors of modern man, as Romanism and Arminianism do, we
should challenge the wisdom of this world. It must be shown to be utterly
destructive of predication in any field. It has frequently been shown to be
such. It is beyond the possibility of the mind of man to bind together the
ideas of pure determinism and of pure indeterminism and by means of that
combination to give meaning to life.[26]
To put it
briefly, Van Til says do not allow your apologetic to be absorbed into a larger
coherence. Rather present it antithetically -- as the only way that any
coherence can be saved.
Thirdly, Van Til wanted to guard
Christianity's indispensability. Christianity does not need to satisfy
autonomous man's test of logic and facts. It does not need to bow before the
authority of the autonomous mind of men. In Toward a Reformed Apologetic,
he says:
Romanism and Arminianism try to
show Christianity can meet the requirements of the natural man with respect to
logic and fact...The rational man must be told that it is not he that must
judge Christ but it is Christ who judges him.[27]
And he is
told that when the natural man has it explained to him, that when he goes to
war with the Word of God, he goes to war with the word of man as well. In The
Intellectual Challenge of the Gospel, Van Til uses these stirring words:
The
implication of all this for Christian apologetics is plain. There can be no
appeasement between those who presuppose in all their thought the sovereign God
and those who presuppose in all their thought the would-be sovereign man. There
can be no other point of contact between them than that of head-on collision.[28]
So, if we
are true to the antithetical nature of Christianity, we must engage in a
presuppositional challenge to unbelievers to show them that in terms of their
worldview they cannot make sense of logic, facts, meaning, value, ethics or human
significance.
An
objection is sometimes raised that if you press the antithesis, then you will
scuttle communication. Interestingly, only presuppositional argumentation can
actually handle the antithesis. If someone thought that the antithesis really
undermined apologetical argumentation, then he would face the choice of (1)
denying the antithesis which the Bible so clearly presents, or (2) giving up
apologetics altogether.
But does
the antithesis scuttle apologetics? Kuyper thought it did. Kuyper clearly saw
the antithesis and recognized that because of it there would be the development
of two sciences or cultures. But from that fact he drew the fallacious
conclusion that Christian apologetics was useless. He states in Principles
of Sacred Theology, that "It will be impossible to settle the
difference of insight. No polemic between these two kinds of science...can ever
serve any purpose. This is the reason why apologetics has always failed to
reach results."[29]
This
conclusion does not follow, however, when other equally Biblical insights are
taken into account. For instance, the unbeliever's intention may be to
follow his naturalistic principle consistently. He may claim to be doing so.
But to do so in practice is actually not possible. He cannot escape the
persuasive power of God's revelation around and within him. Indeed, by the
common grace of the Holy Spirit, he is restrained from successfully obliterating
the testimony of God. And so, he ends up conducting his life and reasoning in
terms of God's revelation, since there is no other way for man to learn and
make sense of the truth about him or the world. He does that, all the while,
verbally denying it, and convincing himself that it is not so.
In The
Defense of the Faith, Van Til writes, "I am unable to follow [Kuyper]
when from the fact of the mutually destructive character of the two principles
he concludes to uselessness of reasoning with natural man."[30] Van Til says the spiritually dead man cannot
in principle even count and weigh and measure. Van Til says that unbelievers
cannot even do math or the simplest operations in science. By that he means the
unbeliever's espoused worldview or philosophy cannot make counting or
measuring intelligible. Now why is that? Briefly, because counting
involves an abstract concept of law, or universal, or order. If there is no
law, if there is no universal, if there is no order, then there is no
sequential counting. But the postulation of an abstract universal order
contradicts the unbeliever's view of the universe as a random or chance realm
of material particulars. Counting calls for abstract entities which are in fact
uniform and orderly. The unbeliever says the world is not abstract -- but that
the world is only material; the universe is not uniform, but is a chance realm
and random. And so by rejecting God's word -- which account for a universal
order or law -- the unbeliever would not in principle be able to count
and measure things. As it is, believers do in fact count and do in fact measure
and practice science, but they cannot give a philosophical explanation of that
fact. Or as Van Til loved to put it: unbelievers can count, but they cannot account
for counting.
In light
of these concerns, the antithesis we have been discussing is not an
insurmountable impediment to apologetical argumentation. It is, ironically,
what makes successful apologetics possible! Not only is the apologist
able to mount a compelling argument against the cogency of the unbeliever's
espoused philosophy and the adequacy of his interpretation of the facts, but
the unbeliever can also be expected to understand and feel the force of the
apologist's reasoning. Apologetical argument -- intellectual reasoning which
goes beyond mere testimony -- must not therefore be disparaged or ignored by
those of us who honor the antithesis. It must not be reduced to a futile effort
made vain by the perspectival antithesis between the regenerate and the
unregenerate.
Van Til
says that Christianity must be presented to men as the objective truth
-- objective because it has an public nature. That is the common ground between
us, believer and unbeliever: the truth that is objectively, publicly there. It
is true independent of our feelings; it is true independent of anyone's belief.
We must present the gospel as objective truth and provably true.
Warfield was right in that regard. It is not only a moral lapse, but it is also
an unjustifiable, intellectual error to reject the message of God's revealed
Word. Because of the antithetical nature of Christianity, only a
presuppositional method of argument is able to press home that transcendental
challenge with consistency and clarity (arguing from the philosophical
impossibility of the contrary position).
The
approach to apologetics which gives us piece-meal evidences (e.g. John Warwick
Montgomery), or the approach to apologetics which gives us pragmatic, personal
appeals (e.g. Francis Schaeffer) or the approach to apologetics which begins
with voluntaristic, fideistic axioms (e.g. Gordon Clark) do not adequately deal
with the antithesis -- thus with Christianity's indispensability for making
sense of rational thought, history, science, or human personality. It is not a
matter of whether we should choose between those approaches and the
presuppositionalist approach. Given the fact of antithesis, the only approach
that will be usable is the presuppositional one. The situational perspective
advanced by Montgomery and the existential perspective advanced by Schaeffer
cannot compete with the normative apologetical approach of Cornelius Van
Til. Only that perspective challenges the unbeliever with Christianity's
indispensability.
Van Til
wrote at the end of Toward a Reformed Apologetic:
Finally, it is my hope for the
future, as it has always been my hope in the past, that I may present Christ
without compromise to men who are dead in trespasses and sins, that they might
have life and that they might worship and serve the Creator more than the
creature...Rather than wedding Christianity to the philosophies of Aristotle or
Kant, we must openly challenge the apostate philosophic constructions of men by
which they seek to suppress the truth about God, themselves, and the world.[31]
Van Til
says we are children of the King. To us, not to the world, do all things
belong. It is only if we demand of men complete submission to the living
Christ of the Scriptures in every area of their lives that we have presented to
them the claims of the Lord Christ without compromise. In short, we must not
synthesize Christ's words with unbelieving philosophies, but rather present Him
antithetically in apologetics. Only then do we do so without compromise.
Notes
Van Til, Cornelius, A Survey
of Christian Epistemology [Originally "Metaphysics of
Apologetics,"] (New Jersey: Presbyterian and Reformed Publ. Co., 1969), v.
(New Jersey: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publ. Co., 1946), p. 364.
(New Jersey: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publ. Co., 1947), p.3.
(New Jersey: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publ. Co., 1955), pp. 319ff.
Geehan, E.R., Jerusalem and
Athens, (New Jersey: Presbyterian and Reformed Publ. Co., 1955), pp. 20,21.
(n.p., n.d.) pp. 24-28.
(London:SCM Press, rev. 1971) pp.
372,373.
Van Til, C., The Intellectual
Challenge of the Gospel, (New Jersey: L.J. Grotenhuis, 1953) p. 17.
Geehan, pp. 19,20.
Macquarrie, p. 373.
(Berkeley: Univ. of Calif. Press,
1982), p.273.
Toulmin, p.274.
ibid. p.274.
(New Jersey: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publ. Co., 1955)
(New Jersey: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publ. Co., 1969)
(New Jersey: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publ. Co., 1974)
Kuyper, A., Principles of
Sacred Theology, trans. J. Hendrik De Vries (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1968
[1898]), pp. 150-156.
Berkouwer, G.C., General
Revelation, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1955), p.145.
"Mission to the Athenians,"
Part IV, Seminary Service, (Denver: Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary,
1964), p.7.
Berkouwer, p. 143.
ibid. p.144.
Stonehouse, N.B., Paul Before
the Areopagus and Other New Testament Studies, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1957), p. 30.
Van Til, C., Paul at Athens,
(Phillipsburg : L. J. Grotenhuis, n.d.) p. 12.
Van Til, Reformed Apologetic,
p. 20.
ibid. p.3.
Van Til, Intellectual
Challenge, p.40.
Van Til, Reformed Apologetic,
p.6, 7.
Van Til, Intellectual
Challenge, p.19.
Kuyper, Principles, p.
160.
Van Til, Defense, p.363.
Van Til, Reformed Apologetic,
p. 28.
Greg L. Bahnsen,(1948-1995) Th.M., Ph.D.
(Philosophy; USC, was an ordained minister in the Orthodox
Presbyterian Church.
HT:CRTA
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