Category Archives: Reflections

What affects me as I try to grasp it.

Is there an Angelic Doctor in the house?

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This is a classic example of the overdetermined logic (constantly re-inscribing a basic metaphysical error that haunts the ideology of modern philosophy) that gives us the “univocity of being” problem as well.

The postulate here is “if humans are free [or, even more typically, if God is an active Creator], then covering causal laws cannot describe events seamlessly.”

When covering causal laws do seem to apply, at whatever level of precision we are able to muster, across what we perceive to be free and responsible events of choosing (or special Providences), then we are forced to either propound another hypothesis or conclude that freedom (or the activity of the Creator) is an illusion, a shorthand for our lack of knowledge. While our being forced to this point does demonstrate a lack in our faith, that is, a point in which modern ideology has blinded us to reality, it does not actually demonstrate what many are led to despair in thinking it demonstrates, that is, that the faith itself was in default.

Statue_of_Hume_with_traffic_cone_hat

When we moderns with defective metaphysics attempt to find another hypothesis to test, staving off despair for another day, we typically do so by stumbling into the error expressed in that last comment: we keep the idea that “if humans are free, then covering causal laws cannot describe events seamlessly” and suggest that what covering causal laws describe is “non-real,” that is, merely a product of useful perceptions. This is good brain candy at a certain phase of intellectual development–but like a lollipop from the dentist, it cannot be mistaken for the desired result without serious harm.

If the world in which we are creatures of the Creator has to be radically subjectivized in order for our creaturely being to have moral significance, then at what point in that perceptual field does moral significance attach? What is the moral significance of the Creator’s instruction concerning the conduct of some creatures within and among others, the rest of Creation? This approach, with the active connivance of many a Modernist, many a liberal, many a libertine, many an authoritarian personality, many a Romantic, many a self-aggrandizing charismatic visionary, leaves the faithful reft of concrete attachment points within the perceptual field for the moral significance of their decisions and the natural and divine law.

It is the serious obligation of Christian teachers to inculcate better metaphysics than this, so as to defend the faithful against the Satanic assault on their faith and hope that uses this metaphysical error as cover. (Sadly, few seem to be well-trained enough to do this job, even among the well-meaning and basically orthodox; even the better sort of homilies are rife with the cheap paradoxy of threadbare modern discourse–dualizing gestures–and rarely manage to make the integrality of the faith a top concern.)

Saint_Thomas_Aquinas,_Protector_of_the_University_of_Cusco

So what is the solution? As is so often the case when you witness a regress or a pendulum-swing in the history of an idea, it is important to recognize that ideology (the tacit stock of “possibilities for thinking” we inherit from our formators and absorb from our milieu) often circumscribes both a proposition and its opposition. That is, both are agreeing on the error while disagreeing on a related system of assertions, many of which may be true or false independent of the organization proposed by any party to the dispute.

In this case, it is that first assertion that we must question in order to find a way forward. Let us examine that again: “if humans are free [or, even more typically, if God is an active Creator], then covering causal laws cannot describe events seamlessly.” Is that true? Is it necessarily true, or thoroughly evident, or well-attested by strong authority?

Well, uh, no. Why precisely should it be thought that an active Creator does not have a much larger and more complex set of “laws” that govern the relations of divine, angelic, and human persons to the heavens and earth, that is, to the whole Universe of which the cosmos–the terrestrial sphere and the “known universe” as described fairly well by what we know of matter/energy and space/time–is a significant subset. If the cosmos is a subset of the total Reality, then we might well expect that the “known universe” is less not only in scope but in complexity (and much less in apparent complexity, as basic information theory tells us that our most comprehensive descriptions must always be considerable reductions from the complexity of actual events).

There is, then, no warrant–there is an appalling lack of warrant, in fact–for the notion that (a) more thorough and accurate descriptions of physical phenomena call into question the reality of human freedom (or of the Creator’s activity) or (b) the only way to escape such question is to assert the “non-real[ity]” or ideality of either the observable cosmos or human freedom (and the Creator’s activity). This can only follow from an ideological assertion, without warrant, that reality is necessarily far less complex than even our own understanding of basic information theory predicts.

And, when examined, the “science” that leads to such claims almost always turns out to be seriously popularized–the claims have a “scienceyness” that we should be increasingly capable of distinguishing from “science” in either of its positive and useful senses.

Bad idea, oddly defensive…. (part 3)

I continue to read through the quasi-creedal document, with attached affirmations and denials, issued by R. C. Sproul’s personal publishing brand Ligonier, and proposed for global rollout with a clear view to adoption as “a common confession around which believers from different churches can rally for mission together,” that is, “not a replacement for the church’s historic creeds and confessions but a supplement that articulates their collective teaching.”  With that disclaimer, it is hard to argue that the statement, which is generally quite orthodox when it is making affirmations about Christology proper, is wrongheaded; I would just argue that it is manifestly inferior to the Nicene Creed, and therefore likely to dilute rather than clarify the doctrine of Christ where it is adopted.

If that were my only concern, I would just say, “Bad idea–why not reaffirm the Nicene Creed with a nice commentary?”  The statement, however, does not limit itself to Christology; it swerves out of its way to press incoherent and, in at least one case, frankly heretical negations and disjunctions into its teaching, ramming Presbyterian soteriology into the Christology shared by all the faithful.  In so doing, this statement risks denying the Gospel itself, and in any case teaches a spiritually harmful view of Jesus’ work that is a real danger to souls.  There are good reasons that ecumenical councils have condemned some of these tenets that a few Protestants insist on making the sine qua non of their teaching, even though almost all practical Christians have long since realized that certain features of God’s work overflow the bounds of such calculations.

It is important to notice that there is no reason one needs to see this as an immediate either/or, because it is definitely possible to be an American conservative evangelical Protestant who is quite faithful and doctrinally well-formed, and still avoid the extremes into which this statement swerves in its effort to avoid agreeing with the Church to whom Jesus entrusted the Gospel, a Church whose dissenters have yet joined in affirming the Nicene Creed and a common Baptism in the Triune Name.  We recognize the difference between Christian communities and the likes of the Latter Day Saints or Jehovah’s Witnesses precisely in this, that they have pursued various heresies apart from the Nicene faith, the faith of Christ and the Apostles, of the New Testament and the Fathers.

When we understand ourselves in this connectedness–this solidarity which mourns our separation and seeks to discover the unity of the faith in the Scriptures and the confession of all the faithful, including especially those milestones laid down by the Apostles and the fathers of the early church, who marked the boundaries where others had strayed–we are in a good position to understand our differences and remain faithful to Christ.  When anyone attempts to make common cause with heretics in order to avoid any risk of admitting solidarity with the Church herself, that is, with the Catholic faith, however, there is almost no boundary to the evils that can result.  Over the years, many have found themselves piling heresy on heresy in the effort to defeat the continuity of the faith, but their efforts never survive a quick survey of the history of Christian doctrine–or a test of spiritual fruit.

A result of Ligonier’s effort to use the affirmations and denials to press their Christology into the service of an arch Protestantism–both in the sense of treating solidarity with the Catholic faith as something to be avoided, even at cost of incoherence, and in the sense of insisting that one specific element of personal salvation is not only necessary, but necessarily demands the negation of all other elements–is that the affirmations and denials are often quite mismatched, and that Presbyterian particularities and anti-Catholic assertions sometimes eclipse any connected account of Christology.  Article 18 is a good example of this lack of connection and perspective:

It would be facile to discuss how particularly Presbyterian the expression “session” is, and therefore how oddly it fits an effort to make common cause among various confessional groups.  Nonetheless, as is so often the case, there is little enough to disagree with in the affirmation; shift the nuances of the vocabulary a bit, and this could be a Catholic or a Baptist statement.  The denials, however, are once again a swerve into anti-Catholicism, and in this case are best characterized as just “oddly defensive.”

Why, I ask, should it be thought necessary to mention this at all in a statement on Christology?  After all, it does not follow directly from solidarity with the Catholic faith in its robust defense and development of the doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation, the key elements of Christology proper, that one should recognize or not the authority of the Bishop of Rome, the servus servorum dei.  Surely, many of us do recognize in the Biblical teaching of Apostolic authority and succession, and of the authority of Sacred Tradition, and of the primacy of Peter among the Apostolic College, the foundation on which the Nicene Creed and other outgrowths of the Spirit’s work in the Church are built.  But those who have been taught to regard highly certain elements of that foundation, and certain rooms in that building, and as it were forbidden by their teachers to enter others, are not therefore automatically excluded from the whole!  But this is the divisive and defensive nature of the Ligonier statement:  Having affirmed the Catholic faith with regard to Christ, it then swerves into an unnecessary and useless effort to deny the solidarity with the Church that its authors have just affirmed.

In so doing, the authors repeat the error in the serpent’s dialogue with Eve, in which the command not to eat the fruit of one tree passes through the misleading question “Did God say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the garden’?” and comes out garbled as “but God said, ‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it.’”  Posed a misleading question by the confusions and deceptions still lively from the past, these authors overstate their effort to correct it, leading to fresh errors and indicating vulnerability to deception.

It’s no part of my current project to defend at length the idea that the Bishop of Rome is the “vicar of Christ,” but suffice to say that such a role can only be conceived by those who believe that Jesus ordained the Apostles, and Peter first among them, to make such decisions.  If you understand this denial to mean that the Bishop of Rome cannot be what the Church has understood him to be since St. Peter’s last days in that city, then you prove too much–for the Apostles themselves, through whom the New Testament was given and among whom the Church was born, clearly spoke in the Lord’s name and claimed that their tradition was the tradition of Christ, and that deviation from that tradition was self-destructive.

Now, if you say, “I agree that there is nothing about the Person of Christ that makes it necessary to reject Apostolic Succession or Petrine Primacy, only I don’t happen to believe those teachings reflect His actions,” then I understand–and you should ask yourself, why is this in a Christology statement?  It is, of course, defensive; it is a way of avoiding the admission that to confess orthodox Christology is to express solidarity with the Catholic faith.

The same, then, goes for Article 21, which inserts a denial (in confused language) of the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist into an affirmation of Jesus’ role as Priest and Victim in the “once for all” sacrifice at Calvary, and His continuing priesthood:

It is hard to know what to do with this other than to point out the paucity and sterility of such a view, the needless reduction beneath what Scripture and Tradition alike teach us is the wholeness and fulness and richness of Christ’s work, by comparison to the Catholic faith–as, for example, expressed at Trent:

God, the Father of mercies, so ordaining, that another priest should rise, according to the order of Melchisedech, our Lord Jesus Christ, who might consummate, and lead to what is perfect, as many as were to be sanctified. He, therefore, our God and Lord, though He was about to offer Himself once on the altar of the cross unto God the Father, by means of his death, there to operate an eternal redemption; nevertheless, because that His priesthood was not to be extinguished by His death, in the last supper, on the night in which He was betrayed,–that He might leave, to His own beloved Spouse the Church, a visible sacrifice, such as the nature of man requires, whereby that bloody sacrifice, once to be accomplished on the cross, might be represented, and the memory thereof remain even unto the end of the world, and its salutary virtue be applied to the remission of those sins which we daily commit,–declaring Himself constituted a priest for ever, according to the order of Melchisedech, He offered up to God the Father His own body and blood under the species of bread and wine; and, under the symbols of those same things, He delivered (His own body and blood) to be received by His apostles, whom He then constituted priests of the New Testament; and by those words, Do this in commemoration of me, He commanded them and their successors in the priesthood, to offer (them); even as the Catholic Church has always understood and taught.

(source: CT022)

Surely nothing must detract from the “once for all” nature of Christ’s sacrifice, but it is a hobbled understanding that avoids connecting so many Biblical dots (see here for more discussion), that makes so little of the unbroken tradition from the earliest days of the Church that understands the Eucharist as a direct and actual participation in that one sacrifice, a participation made possible by Christ’s continuing to be our High Priest and the Lamb of God, “slain from the foundation of the world,” who offers Body and Blood to us as food, as (unbloody) partaking by grace in the sacrificial meal shared by priest and penitent, so that for us this gift makes present here and now the fact–a fact more than empirically verified, not less–of our participation in that one bloody Sacrifice on Calvary.  In fact, our participation becomes so real that we can be called on to be partakers in the very sufferings of Christ, to be “living sacrifices” just as the one who “died for all” is alive and lives as the Lamb slain until the last “Consummatum est” is spoken.

So it is more than ever, I think, important that we adhere to our common Nicene heritage and to whatever we have received from Sacred Scripture and the Tradition within which is has been delivered to us, always seeking more and better light from our Father.  And it is abundantly clear to me that Sproul et al are a hindrance, at this point, in our efforts to do so.  Let us do better than this.

Bad idea, bad soteriology…. (part 2)

Again, as I read through the new quasi-creedal “Statement on Christology” from R. C. Sproul’s personal publishing brand Ligonier, I want to appreciate that in most respects its affirmations are basically correct.  Interestingly, in Article 13, it is part of the denial that happens to repeat something I quite agree is timely:  that “forgiven” does not mean “merely overlooked or passed over” in a conventional sense of “dismissed as unimportant,” though it is definitely the case that “Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us” and that He “passed over” some sins in some senses, and “dismissed” all sins in a juridical analogy sense.  Even the language of double imputation, here, is not wholly objectionable–everything depends on how we understand “imputed” to function within the whole economy of salvation.

Unfortunately, conventional Protestant and especially Presbyterian views are going to separate this element of Christ’s work from the rest, and that disjunction and the denials that support it are going to lead such theology farther and farther from the embrace of Christ:

Again, it is easy to agree that “merely overlooked” is an incorrect description of God’s response to sin.  But the other denial is badly structured:  It is simply the negation of the negation of the affirmation.  It gives us no sense of what positive statement is being denied.  What is important, though, is that there is a pretty obvious lacuna in the formula “imputed by faith.”  In what sense do we mean “faith”?  And what is the agency, and what the instrumentality, and how does that work out in terms of real causes, in the construction “by faith”?

Even in my Protestant days, I always found this construction unpersuasive except as one variant of the Biblical juridical or fiduciary analogy for God’s action of salvation–and the reason is the succession of non sequiturs and ad hoc quasi-dogmatic statements required to conjure in our minds a divine action “faith” which both functions as an infused habitual act of the individual agent intellect *and* can in no sense be called either “infused” or an “act” of that individual that might in any sense be called “work” or be considered “meritorious.”  The result is a “by faith” that can have no concrete content, and an “imputation” that must be isolated from any actual change in the person being saved.  When one considers “imputation” as accounting, pursuing the fiduciary analogy for salvation by faith, this amounts to God not giving credit on Christ’s account, but to His maintaining perpetually false books!

Of course, Article 13 would be just fine if by “imputed” we mean “credited,” and if we understand the divine justice to be displayed in that imputation because Christ’s surpassing merit and His blameless suffering are part and parcel of His determination that “when he appears, we will be like him, for we will see him as he is.”  In fact, we know that this is just how St. Paul describes the unity of these divine causes of salvation.  Unfortunately, in the effort to be good Presbyterians, Sproul and his cohort proceed to restate a major soteriological heresy as though it were part of Christology–may God protect them!

Article 14 is the one that clearly departs from the “faith once for all delivered” about Christ and moves into territory that is dangerous for souls:

OK, skipping over all the well-rehearsed arguments on the subject of whether “justification by faith” or “justification by faith alone” is the message of the Scriptures, a matter in which practical Christians agree more than the wrong sort of doctrinaire thinkers will admit, let’s look first at the logic of the affirmation.  It is a mess.  Again we have the negation, or disjunction, “alone” used under a correlative structure of “to deny” in an affirmation (the second clause).  Again, in the first clause, we have “alone” distributed to two terms in two different ways, and doubled with “apart from” in a way that seems to suggest that the presence of these things is somehow inimical to the others–that only in the affirmative rejection of “personal merit or works” can one have the affirmative presence of justifying faith.

These redoubled negations and disjunctions, which make the affirmation/denial structure incoherent and inadequate as a base for further teachings, are necessary because the plain affirmations would agree with Catholic doctrine, and the authors find themselves both compelled to do so and at a loss for any intellectually honest or rationally coherent way to do so.  These are serious problems, because the Church would be quite happy to countenance my teaching something clearer and more forceful, such as “We are justified by an act of God conditioned on the person and work of Christ, a work apprehended by faith which is infused by the Holy Spirit, faith the content and object of which is the person and work of Jesus Christ, faith which is always by its very character an obedience and an acknowledgement of truth, faith which is always coordinate with hope and ordered toward charity; and without this faith, as habitual act, content, object, and obedience, none can be saved.

In fact, you can find all of that in the Council of Trent, without bothering to look for anything more modern or “ecumenically sensitive” than that!  Here, in fact, are the first several of what many consider an infamous series of anathemas (formal declarations of conditions that separate one from communion) from Trent’s decree on justification.  You should notice that they fence off both “works salvation” and false understandings of “faith” in order to defend the understanding of salvation by grace through faith handed down from Christ and His Apostles:

  • If any one saith, that man may be justified before God by his own works, whether done through the teaching of human nature, or that of the law, without the grace of God through Jesus Christ; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that the grace of God, through Jesus Christ, is given only for this, that man may be able more easily to live justly, and to merit eternal life, as if, by free will without grace, he were able to do both, though hardly indeed and with difficulty; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that without the prevenient inspiration of the Holy Ghost, and without his help, man can believe, hope, love, or be penitent as he ought, so as that the grace of Justification may be bestowed upon him; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that man’s free will moved and excited by God, by assenting to God exciting and calling, nowise co-operates towards disposing and preparing itself for obtaining the grace of Justification; that it cannot refuse its consent, if it would, but that, as something inanimate, it does nothing whatever and is merely passive; let him be anathema.
  • [Skipping a few at a time from here on down.]
  • If any one saith, that all works done before Justification, in whatsoever way they be done, are truly sins, or merit the hatred of God; or that the more earnestly one strives to dispose himself for grace, the more grievously he sins: let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that the fear of hell,-whereby, by grieving for our sins, we flee unto the mercy of God, or refrain from sinning,-is a sin, or makes sinners worse; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that by faith alone the impious is justified; in such wise as to mean, that nothing else is required to co-operate in order to the obtaining the grace of Justification, and that it is not in any way necessary, that he be prepared and disposed by the movement of his own will; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that men are just without the justice of Christ, whereby He merited for us to be justified; or that it is by that justice itself that they are formally just; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that men are justified, either by the sole imputation of the justice of Christ, or by the sole remission of sins, to the exclusion of the grace and the charity which is poured forth in their hearts by the Holy Ghost, and is inherent in them; or even that the grace, whereby we are justified, is only the favour of God; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that justifying faith is nothing else but confidence in the divine mercy which remits sins for Christ’s sake; or, that this confidence alone is that whereby we are justified; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that it is necessary for every one, for the obtaining the remission of sins, that he believe for certain, and without any wavering arising from his own infirmity and disposition, that his sins are forgiven him; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that man is truly absolved from his sins and justified, because that he assuredly believed himself absolved and justified; or, that no one is truly justified but he who believes himself justified; and that, by this faith alone, absolution and justification are effected; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that the grace of Justification is only attained to by those who are predestined unto life; but that all others who are called, are called indeed, but receive not grace, as being, by the divine power, predestined unto evil; let him be anathema.
  • If any one saith, that the commandments of God are, even for one that is justified and constituted in grace, impossible to keep; let him be anathema.

One should always be very careful, too, about reading the canons of councils without due attention to the forms they were reading and hearing of the specific affirmations they reject, and their explanations of that background.  Here’s a wonderful selection from the decree on justification:

Whereas all men had lost their innocence in the prevarication of Adam…they were so far the servants of sin, and under the power of the devil and of death, that not the Gentiles only by the force of nature, but not even the Jews by the very letter itself of the law of Moses, were able to be liberated, or to arise, therefrom; although free will, attenuated as it was in its powers, and bent down, was by no means extinguished in them.[…]
Whence it came to pass, that the heavenly Father…sent unto men, Jesus Christ, His own Son…that He might both redeem the Jews who were under the Law, and that the Gentiles, who followed not after justice, might attain to justice, and that all men might receive the adoption of sons. Him God hath proposed as a propitiator, through faith in his blood, for our sins, and not for our sins only, but also for those of the whole world.[…]
But, though He died for all, yet do not all receive the benefit of His death, but those only unto whom the merit of His passion is communicated. For as in truth men, if they were not born propagated of the seed of Adam, would not be born unjust,…so, if they were not born again in Christ, they never would be justified; seeing that, in that new birth, there is bestowed upon them, through the merit of His passion, the grace whereby they are made just. For this benefit the apostle exhorts us, evermore to give thanks to the Father, who hath made us worthy to be partakers of the lot of the saints in light, and hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the Kingdom of the Son of his love, in whom we have redemption, and remission of sins.[…]
By which words, a description of the Justification of the impious is indicated,–as being a translation, from that state wherein man is born a child of the first Adam, to the state of grace, and of the adoption of the sons of God, through the second Adam, Jesus Christ, our Saviour. And this translation, since the promulgation of the Gospel, cannot be effected, without the laver of regeneration, or the desire thereof, as it is written; unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God.[…]
The Synod furthermore declares, that in adults, the beginning of the said Justification is to be derived from the prevenient grace of God, through Jesus Christ, that is to say, from His vocation, whereby, without any merits existing on their parts, they are called; that so they, who by sins were alienated from God, may be disposed through His quickening and assisting grace, to convert themselves to their own justification, by freely assenting to and co-operating with that said grace: in such sort that, while God touches the heart of man by the illumination of the Holy Ghost, neither is man himself utterly without doing anything while he receives that inspiration, forasmuch as he is also able to reject it; yet is he not able, by his own free will, without the grace of God, to move himself unto justice in His sight. Whence, when it is said in the sacred writings: Turn ye to me, and I will turn to you, we are admonished of our liberty; and when we answer; Convert us, O Lord, to thee, and we shall be converted, we confess that we are prevented by the grace of God.

(source: CT06)

And the Council wisely addresses the many-layered causation that is always at work when we speak of a divine action that embraces Creation and Redemption and also each of the circumstances, down to the innermost thoughts, of every one of us:

Of this Justification the causes are these: the final cause indeed is the glory of God and of Jesus Christ, and life everlasting; while the efficient cause is a merciful God who washes and sanctifies gratuitously, signing, and anointing with the holy Spirit of promise, who is the pledge of our inheritance; but the meritorious cause is His most beloved only-begotten, our Lord Jesus Christ, who, when we were enemies, for the exceeding charity wherewith he loved us, merited Justification for us by His most holy Passion on the wood of the cross, and made satisfaction for us unto God the Father; the instrumental cause is the sacrament of baptism, which is the sacrament of faith, without which (faith) no man was ever justified; lastly, the alone formal cause is the justice of God, not that whereby He Himself is just, but that whereby He maketh us just, that, to wit, with which we being endowed by Him, are renewed in the spirit of our mind, and we are not only reputed, but are truly called, and are, just, receiving justice within us, each one according to his own measure, which the Holy Ghost distributes to every one as He wills, and according to each one’s proper disposition and co-operation. For, although no one can be just, but he to whom the merits of the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ are communicated, yet is this done in the said justification of the impious, when by the merit of that same most holy Passion, the charity of God is poured forth, by the Holy Spirit, in the hearts of those that are justified, and is inherent therein: whence, man, through Jesus Christ, in whom he is ingrafted, receives, in the said justification, together with the remission of sins, all these (gifts) infused at once, faith, hope, and charity. For faith, unless hope and charity be added thereto, neither unites man perfectly with Christ, nor makes him a living member of His body. For which reason it is most truly said, that Faith without works is dead and profitless; and, In Christ Jesus neither circumcision, availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but faith which worketh by charity. This faith, Catechumens beg of the Church–agreeably to a tradition of the apostles–previously to the sacrament of Baptism; when they beg for the faith which bestows life everlasting, which, without hope and charity, faith cannot bestow: whence also do they immediately hear that word of Christ; If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments. Wherefore, when receiving true and Christian justice, they are bidden, immediately on being born again, to preserve it pure and spotless, as the first robe given them through Jesus Christ in lieu of that which Adam, by his disobedience, lost for himself and for us, that so they may bear it before the judgment-seat of our Lord Jesus Christ, and may have life everlasting.

(source: CT06, emphasis added)

But to say that such an all-embracing work of Jesus Christ is only actually effective when it carries with it a habitual exclusion of any effectual conversion, any grace which changes us and makes faith and hope and love part of us, is ludicrous; and what else can this constant and incoherent repetition of an “alone” and “apart from” that excludes portions of the promise of Christ be?  To assert this “alone” and “apart from” in this radical and irrational manner is to deny the Gospel its goodness, the work of Christ its real fruit, to reject any real sense that “fruits worthy of repentance” are a real thing, that “walk worthy” is not a delusion but a serious matter of prayer and effort for all the saints.  I do not want to say that this statement is trying to “deny the Gospel,” but it is hard to avoid saying so–better, perhaps, to point out that its errors can be relied on to scorch and wither the fruits of the Gospel, the fecund realities of the life-giving Creator’s work of Redemption, and to render the believer’s life arid and sterile.

Whoever has ears to hear, let him hear.  In any case, it is important to note that this is where the statement lapses into rank heresy, clearly condemned by a ratified ecumenical council, and that it is in no way spiritually safe to follow where its authors, in their blindness, are leading.

It may also be worth noting that this is in no way a statement of Christology; it is a bit of soteriology gratuitously inserted to divide the faithful, for the authors of this statement know well that there are no orthodox Christian foundations of Christology properly so called that are not well comprehended in the Catholic tradition and the ecumenical councils, so that to clarify Christology is to express solidarity with the Church herself, that is, the Catholic faith.  It is profoundly sad, and profoundly dangerous to souls, that some find it impossible to do so.

So, this is a bad idea….

For reasons not wholly obvious to me–possibly because I have not been caught up in the swirl of American conservative evangelical Protestant theological debate for a while, now–the parachurch teaching arm of R. C. Sproul’s personal ministry, Ligonier, has released a “Statement on Christology” that they are promoting far and wide.  Unlike, say, the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy, this does not seem to be the result of a convergence of many teachers from various places on the evangelical spectrum, working hard to be as ecumenical (that is, as whole-church) as possible for evangelicals.  This is a branded product of one particular ministry, which is being advertised post hoc as of and for the whole church.  As a Catholic, of course, I disagree that Ligonier represents a church, let alone the Church that Jesus Christ founded, and that is by His promise and the Holy Spirit’s effectual work an indefectable historical Bride and Body of Christ, in one-flesh union with Him; but even as an evangelical I would have taken note that Ligonier is not actually even a particular communion, but a publishing brand.  The statement is formatted to echo various evangelical ecumenical efforts, and nods to the ancient creeds, but it is an inadequate expression whose adoption would dilute, rather than concentrate, the knowledge of Christ among the Christian faithful.

I cannot disagree, however, that there has been some confusing teaching and speculation about Christology, especially in those corners where “no creed but Christ” has led to a shrinking of doctrinal clarity to the point where recognizing Mary as “Mother of God” sounds “too Catholic” for many a Biblicist, on the one hand–and no speculation is too heterodox to project on the Scriptures to too many eager innovators, on the other.  (Mary’s role as theotokos is, of course, a settled matter of Christian doctrine and a mark of those who understand Jesus as the Christ attested in Scripture and received in faith by the Church.)  Sproul explains his reasons for rolling out this statement as follows:

Confusion abounds regarding Christology—the doctrine of Christ—both in the West and around the world. As the church continues to grow, it is imperative that believers are taught the truths of Scripture as summarized in such documents as the Nicene Creed, the Definition of Chalcedon, and the Westminster Confession of Faith. Such confessions provide guidelines to help the church develop a more biblical and consistent theology, and we believe the Ligonier Statement on Christology is a tool that can be used to renew the church’s understanding of its historic Christological position. It can also be used as a rallying point around which believers from different churches can come together for evangelism and discipleship. Our goal is not to replace any historic confessions but to draw together their Christological insights in a helpful, summary form so that believers can know what the church has historically taught. That teaching has continuing relevance in our own era.

(source: Announcing the Ligonier Statement on Christology)

I hasten to credit them for being specific that they do not intend their statement “to replace any historic confessions,” but I think one need only read the statement itself to see how inadequately it accomplishes its goal “to draw together their Christological insights”:

We confess the mystery and wonder of God made flesh and rejoice in our great salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord.

With the Father and the Holy Spirit, the Son created all things, sustains all things, and makes all things new. Truly God, He became truly man, two natures in one person.

He was born of the Virgin Mary and lived among us. Crucified, dead, and buried, He rose on the third day, ascended to heaven, and will come again in glory and judgement.

For us, He kept the Law, atoned for sin, and satisfied God’s wrath. He took our filthy rags and gave us His righteous robe.

He is our Prophet, Priest, and King, building His church, interceding for us, and reigning over all things.

Jesus Christ is Lord; we praise His holy Name forever. Amen.

(source: The Ligonier Statement on Christology)

By “inadequate,” I do not mean false or heretical.  No, the short creed-like statement itself, if a little anemic, is sound enough.  It reads like a “contemporvant” reworking of the Apostle’s Creed, with bits of Isaiah and a Presbyterian flavor.  The statement wanders from Christology proper into a typically Protestant emphasis on the means of personal salvation in Christ.  Yet, even in these areas where it wanders from Christology into soteriology, the statement, like the actual Creeds of the Church, does reflect a Catholic understanding of Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition.  To demonstrate this, I’ve supplied links to the Catechism of the Catholic Church affirming each of the following points:

  • He kept the Law (CCC 577ff)
  • atoned for sin (CCC 615-16)
  • satisfied God’s wrath (CCC 613-17)
  • took our filthy rags, gave us His righteous robe (CCC 615)
  • Prophet, Priest, and King (CCC 436 hence 783)
  • building His church (CCC 551-53, 787-89, 756)
  • interceding for us (CCC 662)
  • reigning over all things.(CCC 664, 541ff esp. 550)
  • Jesus Christ is Lord (CCC 446ff)

In its brevity the statement, despite its allusions to the WCF, differs strikingly from that document.  The WCF, of course, is not a creed but a lengthy replacement for the Anglican 39 Articles; and whatever the excellencies of the WCF may be, had as its major purpose consolidating the arguments in favor of heresy and schism, arguments which by their very nature cannot form a basis for unity in the faith.  The statement’s own high degree of concord with the historic faith of the whole Church is, of course, a sign of high hope for the enduring degree of union that all Christians share by baptism in the Triune Name; but it is, ironically, thin precisely in its language of Christology proper.  Compare its language to the Nicene Creed itself:

I believe in one God, the Father almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all things visible and invisible.

I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Only Begotten Son of God, born of the Father before all ages. God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father; through him all things were made.
For us men and for our salvation he came down from heaven, and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary, and became man.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate, he suffered death and was buried, and rose again on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures. He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and his kingdom will have no end.

I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified, who has spoken through the prophets.

I believe in one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. I confess one Baptism for the forgiveness of sins and I look forward to the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come.

Amen.

(source: What We Believe)

This creedal language, richly related to the narrative language of the Gospels and the theological discourse of Athanasius and other saintly contenders for the “faith once for all delivered to the saints,” of which the Church is the custodian, is far superior to the comparatively aseptic and disconnected language of the Ligonier statement.  Even though that statement does not disagree with the Creed, it accomplishes nothing on par with “God from God, Light from Light, true God from True God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father” in locating the Son of God thoroughly within the Trinity and in relation to the Creation; its “through him all things were made” makes him not just an agreeing will, but a particular metaphysical agent in Creation, like the language of John 1 (in which the Logos both “was God” and “was with God”).

The Ligonier statement’s sparse creedal language seems intended to gain assent from widely different evangelical Christians while avoiding the harsh particularity of agreeing on specific propositions about metaphysics in an anti-metaphysical era.  By avoiding this, however, the statement falls short of both a “statement of faith” and a “creed” in their purposes; it does not represent, as nearly as possible, a determination of the whole Church about what has definitely been learned from Christ’s teaching and the whole of the Scriptures.

It’s when the statement moves past the creedal setting and into the affirmations and denials, though, that things get really interesting.  Such “affirmations and denials” are, of course, a common feature of such documents.  Stating a positive truth and indicating clearly what positive error it excludes, when done properly, creates a logical “box” for meaning.  So, for example, to state that the Son of God is “consubstantial with the Father,” and to anathematize any who propose that Jesus is a creature of the Father, makes the rejection of Arianism and the embrace of the unicity and simplicity of the Triune God a solid basis for developing clear teaching about divine and human nature, and the purposes and extent of the Incarnation.  In this statement, however, Ligonier frequently fails to structure the denials as properly orthogonal to the affirmations.  It is hardly alone in this, but it is nonetheless a flaw.  It is especially awkward that several denials appear to be gratuitous assertions not conditioned upon a particular affirmation.

Let me take a few examples.  Of course, nobody will be surprised that several of my examples also specifically deal with matters in which WCF adherents, or in a vague way most Protestants, are still downstream from certain errors that arose in the course of various heresies and schisms with which Europe became rife during the Reformation.

In the first case, I get to point to one in which all the words are, taken as plainly as possible, correct:


Now, I think the language “the historical Jesus” and “in His humanity” are poor choices for an affirmation, because it is hard to read them except as qualifiers, as making distinctions, that would limit the meaning of the clause.  Yes, “the historical Jesus” indicates that we are not merely referring to a “kerygmatic Christ” who was proclaimed by faith in response to a divine revelation that may or may not have been strictly *about* the “historical Jesus.”  Insofar as that is the intent of the phrase, it is well done.  And yes, “in His humanity” is likely intended to prevent any confusion between “Jesus…was conceived” and “Jesus…began to exist.”  But the net effect is still to suggest an interpretive distance between the Son of God, eternally begotten of the Father, and “the historical Jesus…conceived…of the Virgin Mary.”  It is not a good writing choice for a formal statement on Christology (a context in which the Schweitzer/Bultmann sort of language about Jesus, the “historical” versus “kerygmatic,” really has no place at all).  I would suggest, without having carefully edited this together with the exact wording of previous statements, something like the following instead:  “The eternally begotten Son of God was, by the power of the Holy Spirit, miraculously conceived of the substance and born of the Virgin Mary[, so that the man Christ Jesus was truly God and also truly human].”

In addition to this, I suspect that the denial is intended to be aimed at both certain Protestant misunderstandings of the Virgin Birth (the view that the Virgin Birth was necessary so that Jesus could be sinless is not at all uncommon in the circles I grew up in) and also the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin.  Of course, the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception does not at all say that Jesus could only be sinless if Mary was first sinless.  (Here, go read the dogmatic definition for yourself!)  Who does say that?  Ill-informed Protestant apologists who are confused about the history of teaching on the Incarnation, determined to put the Church in the wrong without regard for constructive affirmation of durable truth, and who often use with regard to the Virgin Birth logic they reject with regard to the Immaculate Conception, when they are wrong on both counts!  To its credit, the Ligonier statement does not actually fall into this trap; but as I have reason to believe this confusion will begin to swirl at the evangelical/Catholic boundary again, I want to be abundantly clear about what the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception really means.

It always surprises me when I find myself using a Scripture in the course of explaining Christian, that is to say Catholic, doctrine–only to have someone use that same Scripture as though it opposed the Church’s clear teaching!  This happens when the Ligonier statement seems to be attempting to fence off any proper understanding of the Church’s character on earth:

First, this is a key example of the failure to make the denials orthogonal to the affirmations.  The three part denial appears to respond to three different senses in which “sole mediator” could be applied to Jesus.  Contra “other incarnations,” Jesus would be seen as the one and only human who is also God; contra “[other] human mediators of redemption,” Jesus would be seen as the one and only human in that role (which requires definition not here given); to get the sense required to set this over against “means of salvation apart from [Jesus],” we would have to equate the terms “sole mediator” and “means of salvation.”

We also have a duplication of sense, probably masking an equivocation, at “Christ alone.”  The implicit negations or disjunctions in “alone” and “apart” and “sole” do not make for clarity in a situation where the denial of a positive error should correlate clearly with the affirmation of a positive teaching.  If we go for the clearest and most sensible reading possible, “Christ alone is the sole mediator between God and men in the sense of ‘means of salvation'” is the effective sense yielded by the affirmation and the third denial.  If the “alone” is not merely nugatory, that is, if it is meant to have an additional affirmative thrust, then it must mean “Christ, affirmatively excluding all others.”  But this will hardly do, because it is senseless–it is not conceivable–to affirmatively exclude “everything other than” Christ, that is, more things than we can possibly be aware of; it is spiritually harmful to labor under the need to constantly separate this “means of salvation” Jesus from the Jesus of teaching, healing, understanding, etc.  It is profoundly opposed to the embrace of Christ to attempt to affirmatively exclude all “means” except Christ Himself from Christ’s all-embracing work of salvation:

For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory for ever. Amen.

(source: Romans 11:36 RSV-CE)

The work of Jesus Christ includes all things, reconciling them to Himself; as the “one mediator between God and men.”  But Jesus Himself appointed messengers and ministers, and even the Westminster Confession recognizes that it is possible for these to speak with divine authority even in matters of salvation.

It is senseless to say that the Incarnation was essential to our salvation, that Jesus Christ founded the Church and taught us the Gospel and gave specific instructions and promises, but that nothing and no one involved is a “mediator” or “means of salvation” in any sense of the term.  Plainly, it is necessary to make a distinction between the utterly unique sense in which Jesus Christ is the “sole mediator” and an analogous sense in which others, too, mediate between Jesus Christ and each of us in His work of salvation.  Simply put, God’s use of lesser mediatiors does not in any way impair Christ’s unutterably unique role as the “one mediator between God and men.”  Nobody makes more of the unique work of God in the Incarnation than the true Church that Jesus founded!  The idea that one must affirmatively reject what God has given to lead us to Christ and to incorporate us into His life, in order to rely on Christ *rather than any means Christ might choose to employ*, is too incoherent to be held seriously upon examination.  We may safely reject any serious application of this formula.

Reading charitably, then, we are left with an effective affirmation and denial pair whose denial would be better rewritten thus:  “We deny that any other human has been or ever will be God Incarnate, or that any mediator apart from Christ could reconcile God and man.

I will continue with more later, but I trust you are getting the drift.  The creedal statement is mostly orthodox and sound, and so are most of the affirmations, but the denials stumble a lot, and occasionally conjure errors that may not exist in their efforts to hedge out Catholic views.

Later, we’ll look at some actually serious soteriological errors smuggled into this “Christology,” but for now–it’s just unnecessary, and probably unwise, that this statement should be issued at this form at this time.

Well, that was interesting!

Another Facebook question.

A friend made a bunch of good comments on a thread responding to an especially ill-informed set of arguments on the subject of “eternal security” as taught by many we grew up among.  He then pointed out that I might find this discussion “of interest.”  It’s a difficult topic, because it poses as “either-or” many questions that properly have “both or neither” answers.

Anyway, here’s a scrubbed-up version of the original post:

If you think a Christian can lose their salvation, do you think Jesus lied here?

John 10:27-28
My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand.

And He lied and failed to do God’s will here?

John 6:37-39
All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never cast out. For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will but the will of him who sent me. And this is the will of him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise it up on the last day.

So there are some serious theological issues here that must be addressed.

My friend’s replies were very helpful, though I have a couple critical notes. Since he asked, though, I took a stab at clearing up some of the “serious theological issues” raised in the original post.

Here, then, my response (originally in two parts, here and here):

You’re right that I find this “of interest”! I don’t often find myself interacting with such brutally underdeveloped soteriology, anymore.

(re your comments, Gary, I think you’re resting too heavily on “separate communities” readings of the Gospels, and as far as I can tell in half a generation nobody’s going to remember them. But you say a lot of good and true things in those comments, things friends should heed! Discourse analysis is definitely what’s missing in this kind of reading.)

OK, for starters, how can anyone read John 6 this badly? I mean, the original poster seems to have parachuted in from Mars, grabbed a few phrases, and mistaken them for a doctrine.

We have to do better than this. Here, read the whole thing (John 6).

…and be sure that, while you’re being woodenly literal, you don’t miss the most emphatically repeated thing in this discourse.

Done with that? All right. So, Jesus will not “cast out” or “lose one” of “all whom the Father has given,” and these are those who “come to me.” The number of those that Jesus is talking about who “the Father has given” and who “come to me” are the same; the number Jesus will “cast out” or “lose” from that group is zero.

No problem. Now, how does that tell me about whether I am securely “saved,” hope to be saved, have no hope of being saved, etc.? Oh. It doesn’t.

See, how would I know whether I am part of “all whom the Father has given” unless I “come”? And if I “come” and Jesus says, “abide in me,” and I decide I’d rather go betray him for 30 pieces of silver, then would I not be seized on by perfectly sensible doubt about whether I had “come” in the way that made me *really sure* I was one “whom the Father has given”? And if I deny Jesus three times, would I not also be seized with that sort of doubt? What then will Jesus say to me?

Our original post predicts that Jesus won’t say anything, that He will just wait for me to figure out that “Oh, wait, I ‘went forward at the invitation’ or ‘prayed’ or ‘had a final experience’ or ‘was converted’ that one time, and so now I should simply dismiss my doubts. Betraying or denying Jesus, or whatever else I did, can’t possibly signify that I am separated from God. I should just get on with life.”

Now, surely any Christian will want me to turn back to Christ, not simply assure myself that I’m fine, no matter what I’ve done.

Oh, that’s also what Jesus says. It’s what the prophets said, and the apostles. It’s what the Church has always said, too.

“Simon, Simon, behold, Satan demanded to have you, that he might sift you like wheat, but I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail; and when you have turned again, strengthen your brethren.”
And he said to him, “Lord, I am ready to go with you to prison and to death.”
He said, “I tell you, Peter, the cock will not crow this day, until you three times deny that you know me.”

(source: Luke 22:31-34 RSVCE – Jesus Predicts Peter’s Denial – Bible Gateway)

So what do we actually see, here?

Jesus is the living bread. He is the nourishment and salvation the Jewish people had awaited, and their “good and great” were missing that fact. They were murmuring against him and looking for reasons to attack him. He addresses their lack of faith, pointing out that if they really believed what the Father had taught them–Moses and the prophets–they would also believe him.  Jesus is the lodestone, the shibboleth, the rock of stumbling, the stone of offense: if they believe the Father and belong to Him, they are going to receive the Promise from Jesus; if they claim the heritage of the Promise but reject Jesus, they prove by doing so that they did not believe the Father or belong to Him.  Before the end of Jesus’ work–for those Palestinian Jews Jesus addressed in the First Advent, but also for all humans by the Eschaton–all those who actually believe in God, whatever their starting position, will believe in Jesus; those who do not believe in Jesus are ipso facto no followers of God, no children of the Father of Light. There is only one God, and one Mediator between God and man….

And that’s the proper reading of this passage. Those who do, in fact, come to Jesus are never lost or abandoned, no matter what it looks like for a time. And those who do not, in fact, come to Jesus were not true children of the Father, no matter what it looks like for a time.

The end is all.

But this analysis alone gives me NO WAY TO KNOW whether I am one or the other. It gives me an opening to despair, one way, or to antinomianism, the other, if I mistake my certainty for salvation; but it does not let me classify myself.

Or does it? Because there is that whole “I am the living bread,” and there is that whole “come to me” thing. And that is the thing that is repeated throughout every division of Biblical revelation: Come to me. Abide in me. Dwell in me, and I in you. Return to me. On and on and on the chorus goes.  God chooses to be with us, and calls us to be with Him.

So we have a long tradition in the Church of actually believing that. How do you assure yourself that you belong in Christ? Come to Jesus when you sin, confess, and return to Jesus in communion. You have come to Jesus in baptism, and He has sent His Spirit to live in you; now return to Him every time you wander away, and return continually to Him as you walk with Him, and at whatever moment you look up–from the prodigal to the Emmaus road to Peter leaping in the water to embrace the Resurrected Christ he had so flagrantly denied not long before–wherever you are, “come to me.”

And He will not cast you out.
And He will give you rest.

Facebook questions: the Immaculata

A friend on Facebook posed a good question about the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin.  Another friend, who “is big into apologetics,” had tried to point to “some sort of fallacy” in the notion that “Mary was conceived without original sin, then so was her mother, then her mother and so on and so on.”  On a certain understanding of original sin and the purpose of the Virgin Birth, this is quite a common objection (one I’d expressed myself, “back in the day,” even).

To which I reply:

I expect he’s thinking of a “regress problem” rather than a fallacy, properly speaking. Of course, in matters divine, “regress” is not necessarily a very strong argument: after all, it is the inevitability of causal regress that suggests that only an infinitely great Creator could be the origin of all things.

But in this case, it simply misses the point through a (typical Protestant) misunderstanding of what original sin is and why the Virgin Birth was important. In fairness, this misunderstanding is suggested by some language in Augustine’s anti-Pelagian polemics (a fertile source of misreadings in the Lutheran/Reformed tradition).

The elements of the misunderstanding are roughly these:

  1. Original sin is a transmitted condition, like sickle-cell anemia.
  2. To be sinless, Jesus had to be born without “original sin.”
  3. For Jesus to be born without “original sin,” so must Mary, etc.

This sets up the regress problem. Incidentally, it is also a common explanation for the Virgin Birth, in another variant that takes the “genetic” model of original sin so seriously that it imagines “original sin” is transmitted only by the male, so that all women are affected by it but would not transmit it–if, that is, if men were not needed for procreation. Hence, goeth the flawed theory, Virgin Birth.

But this model misunderstands almost everything (again, bearing in mind that parts of it appear in various polemics and apologetics, so I don’t accuse people of just making up fantasies, here).

Start with original sin. Even on the traducian hypothesis, which Augustine tends toward, original sin is only *analogous* to genetic transmission. It is often quite confusing whether the “soul” or the “nature” is transmitted, and whether it is “transmitted” or shared/diffused, on this view. Suffice to say that the explanation that makes sense of this is *far* more metaphysically sophisticated than the notion of sin as a sort of genetic defect suggests. When we say that some sin is “original” rather than “personal” (or “actual”), we are making a statement about the way sin inheres in the subject and the way God chose to permit sin’s temporary triumph in order to both propagate and rescue the People He always intended to raise up for His Son on this earth. We don’t see sin only in this or that action we take, but as something in us–something we are subjectively incapable of not seeing *as* us. From our conception, we are habitual sinners, that is, we seek our subjective happiness in ways and to degrees that assume and perpetuate our separation from God and which can only keep us happy while we can maintain the illusion that we are uncreated, that we are in total control of what we are and become.

Which is why it is problematic to take the view that Jesus could not have been sinless except under some particular conditions. Jesus is, after all, eternally begotten of the Father before all ages, God from God, light from light, and so could not conceivably have required any additional steps to be free from sin of any kind. Sin had no purchase in Him, and only by His own intentional assumption of human limitations (something He added to Himself) could He even experience temptation and the suffering of struggling against sin in His own being. Jesus did experience separation from God, but the separation was subjective and as a consequence of a voluntary and blameless sharing of our condition that went all the way to a death with no sign of God’s love except His own faithful suffering. How would it make sense to say that this Jesus “needed” a special birth so that He could be sinless?

No, what He chose to do was to fully assume our humanity, to add it to His deity, and to do so in a way that sanctified that humanity–actually and demonstratively marking not only his own human being but human being as such as transformed by His redemptive work–and as such it was fitting that His assumption of humanity should not rupture the ordinary method of generation, but be an unmistakably divine and redemptive participation in that method. For the rest, see the Gospels.

So the Virgin Birth depends upon the work of each Person of the Trinity in accomplishing the Incarnation, but more substantially it is the seed of the New Creation, that is, the re-creation of all humanity and of the cosmos as the scene of divine/human friendship. Mary is not only the human tabernacle in which God Himself is enclosed, but hers is the most immediate cooperation with divine grace. Abraham, Moses, David, Peter, Paul, John Paul II, are all well “downstream” from Mary in how central their cooperation was. Mary is the nearest in intimacy to the Incarnate Son, as well–Moses was the last man God spoke to face to face, and Uriah was struck down for even touching the Ark of the Covenant, but Mary had God Himself within her for nine months. How would it be fitting for the God whose eyes cannot even look directly on sin, who is a consuming fire, to be enclosed in sinful flesh and placed under the maternal care of a sinner? It would have been necessary for Him to wholly sanctify her at some point, and that point would have to be prior to His conception, and even prior to her Fiat.

When we understand it correctly, it quickly becomes fitting that Mary, who was unique in her role, should be dealt with uniquely by the grace of God. She was preserved from all sin so that her Fiat would be a perfect cooperation with God’s will, so that she would be a fit New Eve, a perfect tabernacle, a good Mother of God, and a suitable first member of Redeemed humanity. All those who died expecting the Promise, receive it through her; all those who lived to see Jesus walk the earth, received Him through her; and we who believe without seeing have received Him through her.

There’s no “dodge the sin” game, here. And no regress; what God did in Anna’s womb was unique, and He did it to Mary (not Anna) as the first (in order of generation, not of causation) step in the Incarnation and the work of the Church. And Mary did in fact freely cooperate with this unique grace, and her Fiat was pure, and the rest follows.

Yes, as people have debated and theologized this, over the centuries, you’ll find all kinds of theories. Pious legends about Joachim and Anna abound, and let’s be honest that they must have been pretty amazing parents (else we might have heard about the sufferings of Mary at the hands of her family). Heavily traducian interpretations, sex-is-always-tainted interpretations, and others are pretty easy to find. Some of these make more sense than they sound like to our jaded ears; others are just flawed moments in our continuing effort to listen well to God.

I hope that helps.

All or Nothing

In the end, of course, you cannot be free to lie, or free to commit any sin that separates you from the Creator, the source of all Life and Light. This is not a possibility of existence. You can be free because the Truth has set you free, or you can be in bondage to your lies and lusts. These are your real possibilities; all else is delusion.

(source: In the end, of course, you cannot be free to… – Peter Gordon Epps)

One Grows Tired of Endlessly Translating, and yet–and yet!

It is important to keep a sense of perspective and avoid mistaking frustrating, confusing leadership for conniving or malicious leadership. There is a lot to be thankful for:

Since being elevated to the Chair of St. Peter, Francis hasn’t flagged in his commitment to the faith. He has urged pro-lifers to ‘stay focused’ on preserving the right to life, championed the rights of the poor, rebuked gay lobbies who promote same -sex relations, urged fellow bishops to fight gay adoption, affirmed traditional marriage, closed the door on women priests, hailed Humanae Vitae, praised the Council of Trent and the hermeneutic of continuity, in connection with Vatican II, denounced the dictatorship of relativism. . . . highlighted the gravity of sin and the need for confession, warned against Satan and eternal damnation, condemned worldliness and ‘adolescent progressivism,’ defended the Sacred Deposit of Faith, and urged Christians to carry their crosses even to the point of martyrdom.

(source: Taking Aim at Francis)

And no amount of posturing, whether of the “do you know who I am?” or the “humble brag” sort, should distract us from the one posture of heart, soul, mind, and strength that we all owe to the daily miracle of Christ’s presence and action in every scene of life, and particularly in one:

Keep Riding Forth

Hwær cwom mearg? Hwær cwom mago? Hwær cwom maþþumgyfa?
Hwær cwom symbla gesetu? Hwær sindon seledreamas?
Eala beorht bune! Eala byrnwiga!
Eala þeodnes þrym! Hu seo þrag gewat,
genap under nihthelm, swa heo no wære.
Stondeð nu on laste leofre duguþe
weal wundrum heah, wyrmlicum fah.
Eorlas fornoman asca þryþe,
wæpen wælgifru, wyrd seo mære,
ond þas stanhleoþu stormas cnyssað,
hrið hreosende hrusan bindeð,
wintres woma, þonne won cymeð,
nipeð nihtscua, norþan onsendeð
hreo hæglfare hæleþum on andan.
Eall is earfoðlic eorþan rice,
onwendeð wyrda gesceaft weoruld under heofonum.
Her bið feoh læne, her bið freond læne,
her bið mon læne, her bið mæg læne,
eal þis eorþan gesteal idel weorþeð!
Swa cwæð snottor on mode, gesæt him sundor æt rune.
Til biþ se þe his treowe gehealdeþ, ne sceal næfre his torn to rycene
beorn of his breostum acyþan, nemþe he ær þa bote cunne,
eorl mid elne gefremman. Wel bið þam þe him are seceð,
frofre to Fæder on heofonum, þær us eal seo fæstnung stondeð.

(source: Anglo-Saxons.net : The Wanderer)

So spake the wise man in his mind,
where he sat apart in counsel.
Good is he who keeps his faith,
And a warrior must never speak
his grief of his breast too quickly,
unless he already knows the remedy –
a hero must act with courage.
It is better for the one that seeks mercy,
consolation from the father in the heavens,
where, for us, all permanence rests.

If you love life, if you love beauty, if you love truth and goodness, you must love Jesus Christ. You must love Christianity, the faith of Jesus Christ. You must love the Church that Jesus Christ founded. You must love the People that Jesus adds to that Church. You must love the teachings and the wisdom of that Church, the Spirit’s fulfilling of the Promise of Christ and the unfolding of the Word given to the prophets and apostles. You must love the saints, living and dead, struggling and suffering and blissful.

And you must keep loving truth, keep loving beauty, keep loving goodness, even if you are called “fundamentalist” by hirelings and “bigot” by wolves, for there is no way to love sinners except by taking on the wounds of Christ, that is, the reproaches of the self-saving and the self-hating, and showing the truth as true, the beautiful as lovely, and the good as worth the hassle.

(posted on Facebook first)

Apostolate of the Laity (Part Two)

The whole Church must work vigorously in order that men may become capable of rectifying the distortion of the temporal order and directing it to God through Christ. Pastors must clearly state the principles concerning the purpose of creation and the use of temporal things and must offer the moral and spiritual aids by which the temporal order may be renewed in Christ. The laity must take up the renewal of the temporal order as their own special obligation. Led by the light of the Gospel and the mind of the Church and motivated by Christian charity, they must act directly and in a definite way in the temporal sphere. As citizens they must cooperate with other citizens with their own particular skill and on their own responsibility. Everywhere and in all things they must seek the justice of God’s kingdom.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

The parish offers an obvious example of the apostolate on the community level inasmuch as it brings together the many human differences within its boundaries and merges them into the universality of the Church.(1) The laity should accustom themselves to working in the parish in union with their priests,(2) bringing to the Church community their own and the world’s problems as well as questions concerning human salvation, all of which they should examine and resolve by deliberating in common. As far as possible the laity ought to provide helpful collaboration for every apostolic and missionary undertaking sponsored by their local parish. They should develop an ever-increasing appreciation of their own diocese, of which the parish is a kind of cell, ever ready at their pastor’s invitation to participate in diocesan projects.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

11. Since the Creator of all things has established conjugal society as the beginning and basis of human society and, by His grace, has made it a great mystery in Christ and the Church (cf. Eph. 5:32), the apostolate of married persons and families is of unique importance for the Church and civil society. Christian husbands and wives are cooperators in grace and witnesses of faith for each other, their children, and all others in their household. They are the first to communicate the faith to their children and to educate them by word and example for the Christian and apostolic life. They prudently help them in the choice of their vocation and carefully promote any sacred vocation which they may discern in them. It has always been the duty of Christian married partners but today it is the greatest part of their apostolate to manifest and prove by their own way of life the indissolubility and sacredness of the marriage bond, strenuously to affirm the right and duty of parents and guardians to educate children in a Christian manner, and to defend the dignity and lawful autonomy of the family. They and the rest of the faithful, therefore, should cooperate with men of good will to ensure the preservation of these rights in civil legislation and to make sure that governments give due attention to the needs of the family regarding housing, the education of children, working conditions, social security, and taxes; and that in policy decisions affecting migrants their right to live together as a family should be safeguarded.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

13. The apostolate in the social milieu, that is, the effort to infuse a Christian spirit into the mentality, customs, laws, and structures of the community in which one lives, is so much the duty and responsibility of the laity that it can never be performed properly by others. In this area the laity can exercise the apostolate of like toward like. It is here that they complement the testimony of life with the testimony of the word.(9) It is here where they work or practice their profession or study or reside or spend their leisure time or have their companionship that they are more capable of helping their brethren.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

22. Deserving of special honor and commendation in the Church are those lay people, single or married, who devote themselves with professional experience, either permanently or temporarily, to the service of associations and their activities. There is a source of great joy for the Church in the fact that there is a daily increase in the number of lay persons who offer their personal service to apostolic associations and activities, either within the limits of their own nation or in the international field or especially in Catholic mission communities and in regions where the Church has only recently been implanted.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

No project, however, may claim the name “Catholic” unless it has obtained the consent of the lawful Church authority.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

30. The training for the apostolate should start with the children’s earliest education. In a special way, however, adolescents and young persons should be initiated into the apostolate and imbued with its spirit. This formation must be perfected throughout their whole life in keeping with the demands of new responsibilities. It is evident, therefore, that those who have the obligation to provide a Christian education also have the duty of providing formation for the apostolate. In the family parents have the task of training their children from childhood on to recognize God’s love for all men. By example especially they should teach them little by little to be solicitous for the material and spiritual needs of their neighbor. The whole family in its common life, then, should be a sort of apprenticeship for the apostolate. Children must be educated, too, in such fashion that transcending the family circle, they may open their minds to both ecclesiastical and temporal communities. They should be so involved in the local community of the parish that they will acquire a consciousness of being living and active members of the people of God. Priests should focus their attention on the formation of the laity for the apostolate in their catechetics, their ministry of the word, their direction of souls, and in their other pastoral services. Schools, colleges, and other Catholic educational institutions also have the duty to develop a Catholic sense and apostolic activity in young persons. If young people lack this formation either because they do not attend these schools or because of any other reason, all the more should parents, pastors of souls, and apostolic organizations attend to it. Teachers and educators on the other hand, who carry on a distinguished form of the apostolate of the laity by their vocation and office, should be equipped with that learning and pedagogical skill that are needed for imparting such education effectively.

(source: Apostolicam actuositatem)

You Can Be Holy

39. The Church, whose mystery is being set forth by this Sacred Synod, is believed to be indefectibly holy. Indeed Christ, the Son of God, who with the Father and the Spirit is praised as “uniquely holy,” (1*) loved the Church as His bride, delivering Himself up for her. He did this that He might sanctify her.(214) He united her to Himself as His own body and brought it to perfection by the gift of the Holy Spirit for God’s glory. Therefore in the Church, everyone whether belonging to the hierarchy, or being cared for by it, is called to holiness, according to the saying of the Apostle: “For this is the will of God, your sanctification”.(215) However, this holiness of the Church is unceasingly manifested, and must be manifested, in the fruits of grace which the Spirit produces in the faithful; it is expressed in many ways in individuals, who in their walk of life, tend toward the perfection of charity, thus causing the edification of others; in a very special way this (holiness) appears in the practice of the counsels, customarily called “evangelical.” This practice of the counsels, under the impulsion of the Holy Spirit, undertaken by many Christians, either privately or in a Church-approved condition or state of life, gives and must give in the world an outstanding witness and example of this same holiness.

40. The Lord Jesus, the divine Teacher and Model of all perfection, preached holiness of life to each and everyone of His disciples of every condition. He Himself stands as the author and consumator of this holiness of life: “Be you therefore perfect, even as your heavenly Father is perfect”.(216)(2*) Indeed He sent the Holy Spirit upon all men that He might move them inwardly to love God with their whole heart and their whole soul, with all their mind and all their strength(217) and that they might love each other as Christ loves them.(218) The followers of Christ are called by God, not because of their works, but according to His own purpose and grace. They are justified in the Lord Jesus, because in the baptism of faith they truly become sons of God and sharers in the divine nature. In this way they are really made holy. Then too, by God’s gift, they must hold on to and complete in their lives this holiness they have received. They are warned by the Apostle to live “as becomes saints”,(219) and to put on “as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved a heart of mercy, kindness, humility, meekness, patience”,(220) and to possess the fruit of the Spirit in holiness.(221) Since truly we all offend in many things (222) we all need God’s mercies continually and we all must daily pray: “Forgive us our debts”(223)(3*)

Thus it is evident to everyone, that all the faithful of Christ of whatever rank or status, are called to the fullness of the Christian life and to the perfection of charity;(4*) by this holiness as such a more human manner of living is promoted in this earthly society. In order that the faithful may reach this perfection, they must use their strength accordingly as they have received it, as a gift from Christ. They must follow in His footsteps and conform themselves to His image seeking the will of the Father in all things. They must devote themselves with all their being to the glory of God and the service of their neighbor. In this way, the holiness of the People of God will grow into an abundant harvest of good, as is admirably shown by the life of so many saints in Church history.

(source: Lumen gentium)

More Domini Canes, Please!

As a rule, I don’t go to the lapsed for my understanding of things Catholic, but in this case Rod Dreher has done yeoman’s work on the matter of the anti-Christian sentiments rife in much upper academia, including theological academia, and prominently including the doctoral programs of certain prominent Jesuit schools.  A case in point was one signatory of the recent, risible, even cute in its precious pique, letter attempting to silence Ross Douthat (who I only agree with when he’s right, so to speak):

She offered in public, for the public’s consideration (which is why you upload something to Academia.edu), a paper about reading Thomas Aquinas through the lens of gender theorist Judith Butler, and concluding that the Magisterium (the teaching authority of the Catholic Church) has misunderstood the medieval theologian, who actually would have considered homosexual acts to be morally licit. She posted a paper in which she lauds gangsta rapper Tupac Shakur as a “theologian.” And she posted a paper in which she contends that the Eucharist and Baptism, the two central sacraments of the Catholic faith, are fatally compromised by white supremacy, and that the Catholic Church can only find redemption if it begins lobbying the government to force white people to leave their homes.

(source: Why Study Academic Theology? | The American Conservative)

Later, he quotes extensively from his further correspondences with some theologians one might call orthodox, who refer to Benedict XVI’s account of the pulpit in the Cathedral at Troia, with its image of the faithful hound trying to fight off the roaring lion who is seeking to devour the lamb–the lambs being the Church, which as Christ is always sacrificed (but never subject to the devil) and as His flock is always at risk from the devil (but protected by Christ and His under-shepherds).  The faithful minister, and the faithful theologian, ought to be those sheepdogs.

Like the Order of Preachers, the Domini Canes of old, who are not incidentally the major contributors to the development of the modern university (and those among whom the Angelic Doctor was given to the world)–like those faithful hounds, we too must rise at the scent of lion’s musk and interpose ourselves before the faithful.  And we pray and call out for the Lord to send stronger protectors, not only sheepdogs but shepherds and undershepherds, in obedience to whom we may pour ourselves out in proclamation and defense of “the faith once for all delivered to the saints.”

Anything else is infidelity, and should be plainly called so.  At the highest level of authority possible, with as systematic an inquiry as possible, as transparently and as publicly as possible.  Let the light shine.

Why You Must Understand Analogy (or, the misrule of bad metaphors)

In an impassioned (and there’s part of the problem) post, today, that raises some good questions about our sense of priority–do we rule grace, or does grace rule us?–and profoundly conflates basic realities, while ignoring some fairly basic principles of reading and reasoning, Elizabeth Scalia (“the Anchoress”) ends up flatly contradicting rock-bottom authority on the subject of receiving the Eucharist:

What I understand today is that we are all deeply in need of medicine, and none of us can defile the purity that is Christ, nor can the Holy Eucharist defile any one of us.

(source: Synod Fathers, Fellow Catholics: Do We Still Not Understand?)

Compare the straightforward language that is, in a real sense, the very clearest and purest expression of ecclesial authority as divine mercy:

Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup.

For any one who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment upon himself. That is why many of you are weak and ill, and some have died.

But if we judged ourselves truly, we should not be judged. But when we are judged by the Lord, we are chastened so that we may not be condemned along with the world.

So then, my brethren, when you come together to eat, wait for one another— if any one is hungry, let him eat at home—lest you come together to be condemned. About the other things I will give directions when I come.

(source: 1 Corinthians 11:27-34 RSVCE)

Notice the three specific things that Scalia gets flatly wrong, and which are of the essence of Paul’s point:

  1. God reveals, as essential to the character of the Eucharist, that to receive unworthily means to receive affliction, not grace.
  2. God, not humans, reveals and determines the fact and severity of this “judgment,” this “chastening,” this risk that we “come together to be condemned.”  We are warned that it is real, and to avoid it!
  3. “Weakness” as well as disease and moribundity are consequences of unworthy reception.  You cannot treat the disease with more disease, and sacrilegious reception is the disease.

Now, I do understand the desire to upbraid those who are excessively anxious–the sausage-making is ugly, and it is dispiriting, and people do get fatigued.

And I am painfully aware that, for those whose everyday state is not a known, public condition of choosing against divine command, natural law, and Church teaching, there is an invisible struggle often waged that is not one bit less serious, against a tendency to turn “culpability” into the avoid-uncomfortable-confessions card that lets us “write down” our sins from “mortal” to “grave but venial,” ignoring our responsibility to confess all grave sins (988), not all “fully culpable and definitely mortal” sins, before approaching for communion (916)–or to make an Act of Contrition, including an intention to confess at the first opportunity.

I am not saying this is easy–no, it is hard.  It is the hardness of it which shows us our weakness, our entanglement, our confusion.  It is made almost unbearably hard, though, when attempting this good thing is itself portrayed as wrongheaded–when those who seek to do it are treated as though they needed therapy, rather than as though they realized that, not being whole, they desperately need a Physician.  When people recognize a need, they help each other provide for that need–by providing the wide access to Confession that our Holy Father has so bountifully provided.  But dismissing the need, waving it away, does not make it go away.  Telling people they need not become stronger, because they can avoid doing the hard thing, does not make them stronger–it cripples them.  Helping people do hard things, things which make for strength and health even though we who are so weak and foolish and diseased and maimed find the painful and difficult, makes them stronger.

It is completely understandable that some of us are frustrated with those who say “wave away the sin and grace will abound,” and others are frustrated with those who say “become whole, and then we’ll see about an appointment with the Physician.”  But neither of these is the same as saying, “take the proper medicine at the proper time, as the Physician has ordered.”

In her understandable frustration, Scalia needs to watch out, lest in a “strike the rock twice” gesture, she fling up her hands in opposition not only to some excessively reactionary, excessively anxious people, but also to St. Paul and the whole of divine revelation that agrees with him!

And this is why it is so profoundly dangerous to speak constantly in transient, ungrounded metaphors, and to use sweeping subjective characterizations where one ought to preserve distinctions.

The Eucharist is “medicine” from the point of view of those who can receive it healingly, and the Church is led by the Great Physician to administer the correct medicine at the correct time.  The Catechumenate is the proper place for those not yet ready for Baptism; hasty baptism is not better than proper preparation, even though we know that God’s saving love is exhibited to those who die suddenly “in desire of baptism” yet without the benefit of the ceremony.

The Physician’s healing love is well exhibited to those who, desiring to live in the faith, are given the grace and help to choose between the “use of marriage” in what is not a true marriage, and full Communion.  They may well not be ready to accept this; here the Eucharist summons them to become ready by the regular use of all the other means of grace.

Underlying the errors, here, is a strange belief that the Eucharist is magic, that it has one kind of properties that always tend in only one way–flatly contradicting the potent antithesis of salvation and reprobation that St. Paul (and the other Apostles) plainly learned from the Jesus Christ who deployed it so frequently, as abundantly recorded in the Gospels.  In fact, this “medicine” metaphor, used out of bounds, is exactly the kind of mastering, Church-as-dispenser metaphor that Scalia rightly rejects.

Steady, friends, steady.  When you solidly pin down the foundations, you can become creative, by God’s grace, about how to help people.  But when you untether yourself from those foundations, it takes surprisingly little to be “blown about by every wind of doctrine.”

Stay the course.  Hold fast to what is true.  Listen more to the careful and wise distinctions that have been tested by time than to the conflations that vent transient emotions and yield before wasteful passions.  Heed the Scriptures,

so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the cunning of men, by their craftiness in deceitful wiles.

(source: Ephesians 4:14 RSVCE)