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Calvin and Calvinism » 2012 » March

Archive for March, 2012

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Dabney:

1) Yet not per
acceptilationem
.

Yet, we shall by no means agree, with the Scotists, and the early Remonstrants, that Christ did not make a real and equivalent satisfaction for sinners’ debts. They say, that His sacrifice was not such, because He did not suffer really what sinners owed. He did not feel remorse, nor absolute despair; He did not suffer eternally; only His humanity suffered. But they suppose that the inadequate sufferings were taken as a ransom-price, per acccptilationem: by a gracious waiver of God’s real claims of right. And they hold that any sacrifice, which God may please thus to receive, would be thereby made adequate. The difference between their view and the Reformed may be roughly, but fairly defined, by an illustration drawn from pecuniary obligations : A mechanic is justly indebted to a land-owner in the sum of one hundred pounds; and has no money wherewith to pay. Now, should a rich brother offer the land-lord the full hundred pounds, in coin of the realm, this would be a legal tender; it would, ipso facto, cancel the debt, even though the creditor captiously rejected it. Christ’s satisfaction is not ipso facto in this commercial sense. There is a second supposition: that the kind brother is not rich, but is himself an able mechanic; and seeing that the landlord is engaged in building, he proposes that he will work as a builder for him two hundred days, at ten shillings per diem (which is a fair price), to cancel his poor brother’s debt. This proposal, on the one hand, is not a “legal tender,” and does not compel the creditor. He may say that he has already enough mechanics, who are paid in advance; so that he cannot take the proposal. But, if he judges it convenient to accept it, although he does not get the coin, he gets an actual equivalent for his claim, and a fair one. This is satisfactio. The debtor may thus get a valid release on the terms freely covenanted between the surety and creditor. But there is a third plan : The kind brother has some ” script” of the capital stock of some company, which, ” by its face ” amounts nominally, to one hundred pounds, but all know that it is worth but little. Yet he goes to the creditor, saving: ” My brother and I have a pride about bearing the name of full payment of our debt. We propose that you take this ‘ script’ as one hundred pounds (which is its nominal amount), and give us a discharge, which shall state that you have payment in full.” Now, if the creditor assents, this is payment per acceptilationem. Does Christ’s satisfaction amount to no more than this ? We answer emphatically, it does amount to more. This disparaging conception is refuted by many scriptures, such as Isa. xlii : 21; liii : 6. It is dishonorable to God, representing Him as conniving at a “legal fiction,” and surrendering all standard of truth and justice to confusion. On this low scheme, impossible to see how any real necessity for satisfaction could exist.

Christ Suffered the
very Penalty.

The Reformed assert then, that Christ made penal satisfaction, by suffering the very penalty demanded by the law of sinners. In this sense, we say even idem fecit.

The identity we assert is, of course, not a numerical one, but a generic one. If we are asked, how this could be, when Christ was not holden forever of death, and experienced none of the remorse, wicked despair, and subjective pollution, attending a lost sinner’s second death? We reply: the same penalty, when poured out on Him, could not work all the detailed results, because of His divine nature and immutable holiness. A stick of wood, and an ingot of gold are subjected to the same fire. The wood is permanently consumed: the gold is only melted, because it is a precious metal, incapable of natural oxidation, and it is gathered, undiminished, from the ashes of the furnace. But the fire was the same! And then, the infinite dignity of Christ’s person gives to His temporal sufferings a moral value equal to the weight of all the guilt of the world. Dabney, Lectures in Systematic Theology, (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1972), 504-505. [Some spelling modernized; marginal headers cited inline; and underlining mine.]

2) But the member from New Orleans, Dr. Palmer, insists that the report is, to say the least, “not happily worded,” in that its phraseology leaves a loop-hole for the lubricity of the new theology. Well, Mr. Moderator, I presume that the committee would at any time have partly assented to this judgment; for you will bear us witness that our estimate of our labors has been modest. We did not claim that our phraseology was absolutely the best, but only that it would do. We admitted that language is an instrument so flexible that an indefinite improvement may be made in the verbal dress of any thoughts by continued care and criticism. But, sir, the course of this discussion inclines me to place a more self-applauding estimate upon our humble labors; and I must profess that I think our doctrinal statements are rather happily worded on this point. I have been convinced of this by the very objections of the critics.

One of these was that the phrase, Christ bore his sufferings “as the penalty” of guilt, was loose and incorrect, because it suggested, by the little word as, not only a substitution of one person for another–Christ for the sinner–but of one penalty for another; whereas, it was urged, we should have taught that Christ suffered the identical penalty due the sinner. Thus, they complained, the deceitful errorist was enabled to cheat us honest folk by talking about a penal satisfaction for sin, when, after all, he only meant a loose sort of quasi satisfaction. Now I have been made very happy to find that our much abused little “as” expresses so much truth and so accurately. For the substitution, not only of one person for another, but of one penalty for another, in the atoning transaction called by theologians satisfaction, is the very thing asserted by the standard authors. It is obvious that if one person is substituted for another, then the penalty substituted cannot be identical with that in the room of which it came, in the sense of a numerical identity, however absolutely conformed it might be in a generic identity. And this distinction the acute Whately points out, in the introduction to his Logic, if I remember aright, in connection with this very subject. But farther, these divines all assert most emphatically, that in a case of penal satisfaction there is not an absolute generic identity between the penalty due and the penalty substituted. Turrettin, Rill, Dr. John H. Rice, I find saying, with entire unanimity, that satisfaction is where something else, not exactly the debt due, but a moral equivalent, is accepted as sufficient by the injured party. According to those acute critics, the Southern Presbyterian and Southern Presbyterian Review, little “as” suggested this idea. But this, say these great masters, is just the idea of Christ’s satisfaction. Is not this rather happy? R.L. Dabney, ‘Speech on the Fusion of the United Synod,” in Discussions: Evangelical and Theological, 2:308-309. [Some spelling modernized and underlining mine.]

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Hodge:

16. What distinction is intended by the theological terms, natural and moral ability? By natural ability was intended the possession, on the part of every responsible moral agent, whether holy or unholy, of all the natural faculties, as reason, conscience, free will, requisite to enable him to obey God s law. If any of these were absent, the agent would not be responsible.†

By moral ability was intended that inherent moral condition of these faculties, that righteous disposition of heart, requisite to the performance of duty.

Although these terms have been often used by orthodox writers in a sense which to them expressed the truth, yet they have often been abused, and are not desirable. It is evidently an abuse of the word to say that sinners are naturally able, but morally unable, to obey the law; for that can be no ability which leaves the sinner, as the Scriptures declare, utterly unable either to think, feel, or act aright. Besides, the word “natural,” in the phrase “natural ability,” is used in an unusual sense, as opposite to moral; while in the usual sense of that word it is declared in Scripture that man is by nature, i.e., naturally, a child of wrath.

[† Edwards on the Will, part L, sect. 4.]

A.A. Hodge, Outlines of Theology (London: T. Nelson and Sons, 1877), 272. [Footnote included.]

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Shedd:

1) In the Westminster statement, the disability or inability is connected with the disposition and inclination of the will. Man is “indisposed to all spiritual good, and inclined to all [spiritual] evil.” It follows from this, that the cause and seat of the inability in question is in the action and state of the voluntary faculty. It is moral or willing inability.

Nam servit voluntas peccato, non nolens sed volens. Etenim voluntas non noluntas dicitur. Second Helvetic Confession, IX.

In denominating it “moral” inability, it is not meant that it arises merely from habit, or that it is not “natural” in any sense of the word nature. A man is sometimes said to be morally unable to do a thing, when it is very difficult for him to do it by reason of an acquired habit, but not really impossible. This is not the sense of the word “moral” when applied to the sinner’s inability to holiness. He is really and in the full sense of the word impotent. And the cause of this impotence is not a habit of doing evil which he has formed in his individual life, but a natural disposition which he has inherited from Adam. The term “moral,” therefore, when applied to human inability denotes that it is voluntary, in distinction from created. Man’s impotence to good does not arise from the agency of God in creation, but from the agency of man in apostasy.

Whether, therefore, it can ever be called “natural” inability, will depend upon the meaning given to the term “nature.”

(a) If “nature” means that which is created by God, there is no natural inability to good in fallen man. But if “nature” means “natural disposition,” or “natural inclination,” there is a “natural” inability to good in fallen man.

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2
Mar

John More (d. 1592) on Romans 2:4 (Homiletic Reference)

   Posted by: CalvinandCalvinism    in Romans 2:4

More:

Thus we have heard, good brethren, what we have to learn out of this sentence, it remains that we knowing it, put it in practice, and that we do not think it sufficient to come hither to sit here, and to lend our ears to the preaching to give it the hearing, and have yet notwithstanding no purpose of amending, but rather some hard heart still to continue in our sin, as we came: for assuredly if we do so, the eternal God will never suffer unrevenged such horrible contempt of his blessed word: it is an horrible abuse of God’s word, yea of God himself, when we so dally with God. Ye, if I that preach the word should think it sufficient for me, when I have told you God’s will out of his Word, and yet not apply it to myself, to reform my life after the same, assuredly I should answer that horrible contempt of God’s majesty before his eternal throne of justice. If ye shall then (good brethren) harden your faces against this word of God, and shake it off, and say still in your hearts, “For all this I will continue in my sin a while, and for this all his threatening I trust I am not so near death, but I may amend before that day come, let him say what he will, I will not yet begin,” then I testify unto you before the eternal God, that the master of the house will come in an hour when you least think, and give you your portion with hypocrites, where shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth [Matth.24:53.]: and then when would it is too late, alas ye cannot. If ye shall now abuse thus day of mercy, and God’s long-suffering that draws you to repentance [Rom. 2:4.], and like carnal beasts sting abroad, and kick up your heels against the Lord, violently throwing from you all godly admonitions, whereby he goes about to pull you to him [2 Pet. 3:13.], he shall come upon you like a fierce lion, and utterly consume you in your greatest pride, when ye least think: but I hope better of you, brethren, and good cause I have so to do, I thank God for it, I trust the Lord will work in our heart, that ye will not defer the time, but even now begin to turn to him, while he offers you mercy, and presume not of hereafter. Remember the five foolish virgins, that had no oil in their lamps, and yet for all that took no thought, but snorted and slumbered without all care, thinking they should have time enough to prepare, but alas they were deceived, for the bridegroom came suddenly, and those that were found ready enter in, and those jolly fools that deferred so long were shut out, and shall never enter in: for God’s sake, brethren, let these things enter deep into our hearts, that we may think upon them continually, and say always with that holy man, whether I sleep or wake, me think I hear continually sounding in mine ears, the trump of the Lord that says, “Arise ye dead, come to judgement”: let us always be prepared against that day, and always say in our hearts with the saints in the Apocalypse. “Come Lord Jesus, come quickly” [Rev. 22:20.], I am ready for thee, come when thou wilt: that our hearts may still long after it, and say with the Apostle, “I desire to be dissolved and to be with thee, Oh Christ [Phil. 1:23.]: otherwise if we shall defer it, and take our pleasures in this world, then also even the remembrance of death, Oh how bitter will it be to him, that has his heart upon the things of this world? It will nip our heart asunder to part with our goods, to part with our pleasures, and all because we have so long abused God’s long-suffering, and prolonged the day of our repentance, till suddenly we are taken….

John More, “The First Sermon. 2. Cor. 5.10,” in Three Godly and Frvitfvl Sermons (Printed by John Legatt, Printer to the Vniversitie of Cambridge, And are to be solde at the signe of the Sunne in Pauls Church-yeard in London, 1594), 18-20; [sermon 1.]. [Some reformatting; some spelling modernized; marginal references cited inline; and underlining mine.]