Reformed Churchmen

We are Confessional Calvinists and a Prayer Book Church-people. In 2012, we remembered the 350th anniversary of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer; also, we remembered the 450th anniversary of John Jewel's sober, scholarly, and Reformed "An Apology of the Church of England." In 2013, we remembered the publication of the "Heidelberg Catechism" and the influence of Reformed theologians in England, including Heinrich Bullinger's Decades. For 2014: Tyndale's NT translation. For 2015, John Roger, Rowland Taylor and Bishop John Hooper's martyrdom, burned at the stakes. Books of the month. December 2014: Alan Jacob's "Book of Common Prayer" at: http://www.amazon.com/Book-Common-Prayer-Biography-Religious/dp/0691154813/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417814005&sr=8-1&keywords=jacobs+book+of+common+prayer. January 2015: A.F. Pollard's "Thomas Cranmer and the English Reformation: 1489-1556" at: http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Cranmer-English-Reformation-1489-1556/dp/1592448658/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1420055574&sr=8-1&keywords=A.F.+Pollard+Cranmer. February 2015: Jaspar Ridley's "Thomas Cranmer" at: http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Cranmer-Jasper-Ridley/dp/0198212879/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1422892154&sr=8-1&keywords=jasper+ridley+cranmer&pebp=1422892151110&peasin=198212879

Showing posts with label Warfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warfield. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

B.B. Warfield: Pelagianism & Augustinianism

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Augustine & The Pelagian Controversy

by B. B. Warfield

 
Table of Contents
Part I: The Origin & Nature of Pelgagianism
Part II; The External History of the Pelagian Controversy
Part III: Augustine's Part in The Controversy
Part IV: The Theology of Grace
 
Part I: The Origin & Nature of Pelgagianism
It was inevitable that the energy of the Church in intellectually realizing and defining its doctrines in relation to one another, should first be directed towards the objective side of Christian truth. The chief controversies of the first four centuries and the resulting definitions of doctrine, concerned the nature of God and the person of Christ; and it was not until these theological and Christological questions were well upon their way to final settlement, that the Church could turn its attention to the more subjective side of truth. Meanwhile she bore in her bosom a full recognition, side by side, of the freedom of the will, the evil consequences of the fall, and the necessity of divine grace for salvation. Individual writers, or even the several sections of the Church, might exhibit a tendency to throw emphasis on one or another of the elements that made up this deposit of faith that was the common inheritance of all. The East, for instance, laid especial stress on free will: and the West dwelt more pointedly on the ruin of the human race and the absolute need of God's grace for salvation. But neither did the Eastern theologians forget the universal sinfulness and need of redemption, or the necessity, for the realization of that redemption, of God's gracious influences; nor did those of the West deny the self-determination or accountability of men. All the elements of the composite doctrine of man were everywhere confessed; but they were variously emphasized, according to the temper of the writers or the controversial demands of the times. Such a state of affairs, however, was an invitation to heresy, and a prophecy of controversy; just as the simultaneous confession of the unity of God and the Deity of Christ, or of the Deity and the humanity of Christ, inevitably carried in its train a series of heresies and controversies, until the definitions of the doctrines of the Trinity and of the person of Christ were complete. In like manner, it was inevitable that sooner or later some one should arise who would so one-sidedly emphasize one element or the other of the Church's teaching as to salvation, as to throw himself into heresy, and drive the Church, through controversy with him, into a precise definition of the doctrines of free will and grace in their mutual relations.


This new heresiarch came, at the opening of the fifth century, in the person of the British monk, Pelagius. The novelty of the doctrine which he taught is repeatedly asserted by Augustine,2 and is evident to the historian; but it consisted not in the emphasis that he laid on free will, but rather in the fact that, in emphasizing free will, he denied the ruin of the race and the necessity of grace. This was not only new in Christianity; it was even anti-Christian. Jerome, as well as Augustine, saw this at the time, and speaks of Pelagianism as the 'heresy of Pythagoras and Zeno';3 and modern writers of the various schools have more or less fully recognized it. Thus Dean Milman thinks that 'the greater part' of Pelagius' letter to Demetrias 'might have been written by an ancient academic';4 and Bishop Hefele openly declares that their fundamental doctrine, 'that man is virtuous entirely of his own merit, not of the gift of grace,' seems to him 'to be a rehabilitation of the general heathen view of the world,' and compares with it Cicero's words:5 'For gold, lands, and all the blessings of life, we have to return thanks to the Gods; but no one ever returned thanks to God for virtue.'6 The struggle with Pelagianism was thus in reality a struggle for the very foundations of Christianity; and even more dangerously than in the previous theological and Christological controversies, here the practical substance of Christianity was in jeopardy. The real question at issue was whether there was any need for Christianity at all; whether by his own power man might not attain eternal felicity; whether the function of Christianity was to save, or only to render an eternity of happiness more easily attainable by man.7


Genetically speaking, Pelagianism was the daughter of legalism; but when it itself conceived, it brought forth an essential deism. It is not without significance that its originators were 'a certain sort of monks;' that is, laymen of ascetic life. From this point of view the Divine law is looked upon as a collection of separate commandments, moral perfection as a simple complex of separate virtues, and a distinct value as a meritorious demand on Divine approbation is ascribed to each good work or attainment in the exercises of piety. It was because this was essentially his point of view that Pelagius could regard man's powers as sufficient to the attainment of sanctity — nay, that he could even assert it to be possible for a man to do more than was required of him. But this involved an essentially deistic conception of man's relations to his Maker. God had endowed His creature with a capacity (possibilitas) or ability (posse) for action, and it was for him to use it. Man was thus a machine, which, just because it was well made, needed no Divine interference for its right working; and the Creator, having once framed him, and endowed him with the posse, henceforth leaves the velle and the esse to him.


At this point we have touched the central and formative principle of Pelagianism. It lies in the assumption of the plenary ability of man; his ability to do all that righteousness can demand — to work out not only his own salvation, but also his own perfection. This is the core of the whole theory; and all the other postulates not only depend upon it, but arise out of it. Both chronologically and logically this is the root of the system.


When we first hear of Pelagius, he is already advanced in years, living in Rome in the odour of sanctity,8 and enjoying a well-deserved reputation for zeal in exhorting others to a good life, which grew especially warm against those who endeavoured to shelter themselves, when charged with their sins, behind the weakness of nature.9 He was outraged by the universal excuses on such occasions — 'It is hard!' 'it is difficult!' 'we are not able!' 'we are men!' — 'Oh, blind madness!' he cried: 'we accuse God of a twofold ignorance — that He does not seem to know what He has made, nor what He has commanded — as if forgetting the human weakness of which He is Himself the Author, He has imposed laws on man which He cannot endure.'10 He himself tells us11 to that it was his custom, therefore, whenever he had to speak on moral improvement and the conduct of a holy life, to begin by pointing out the power and quality of human nature, and by showing what it was capable of doing. For (he says) he esteemed it of small use to exhort men to what they deemed impossible: hope must rather be our companion, and all longing and effort die when we despair of attaining. So exceedingly ardent an advocate was he of man's unaided ability to do all that God commanded, that when Augustine's noble and entirely scriptural prayer — 'Give what Thou commandest, and command what Thou wilt' — was repeated in his hearing, he was unable to endure it; and somewhat inconsistently contradicted it with such violence as almost to become involved in a strife.12 The powers of man, he held, were gifts of God; and it was, therefore, a reproach against Him as if He had made man ill or evil, to believe that they were insufficient for the keeping of His law. Nay, do what we will, we cannot rid ourselves of their sufficiency: 'whether we will, or whether we will not, we have the capacity of not sinning.'13 'I say,' he says, 'that man is able to be without sin, and that he is able to keep the commandments of God;' and this sufficiently direct statement of human ability is in reality the hinge of his whole system.


There were three specially important corollaries which flowed from this assertion of human ability, and Augustine himself recognized these as the chief elements of the system.14 It would be inexplicable on such an assumption, if no man had ever used his ability in keeping God's law; and Pelagius consistently asserted not only that all might be sinless if they chose, but also that many saints, even before Christ, had actually lived free from sin. Again, it follows from man's inalienable ability to be free from sin, that each man comes into the world without entailment of sin or moral weakness from the past acts of men; and Pelagius consistently denied the whole doctrine of original sin. And still again, it follows from the same assumption of ability that man has no need of supernatural assistance in his striving to obey righteousness; and Pelagius consistently denied both the need and reality of divine grace in the sense of an inward help (and especially of a prevenient help) to man's weakness.


It was upon this last point that the greatest stress was laid in the controversy, and Augustine was most of all disturbed that thus God's grace was denied and opposed. No doubt the Pelagians spoke constantly of 'grace,' but they meant by this the primal endowment of man with free will, and the subsequent aid given him in order to its proper use by the revelation of the law and the teaching of the gospel, and, above all, by the forgiveness of past sins in Christ and by Christ's holy example.15 Anything further than this external help they utterly denied; and they denied that this external help itself was absolutely necessary, affirming that it only rendered it easier for man to do what otherwise he had plenary ability for doing. Chronologically, this contention seems to have preceded the assertion which must logically lie at its base, of the freedom of man from any taint, corruption, or weakness due to sin. It was in order that they might deny that man needed help, that they denied that Adam's sin had any further effect on his posterity than might arise from his bad example. 'Before the action of his own proper will,' said Pelagius plainly, 'that only is in man which God made.'16 'As we are procreated without virtue,' he said, 'so also without vice.'17 In a word, 'Nothing that is good and evil, on account of which we are either praiseworthy or blameworthy, is born with us — it is rather done by us; for we are born with capacity for either, but provided with neither.'18 So his later follower, Julian, plainly asserts his 'faith that God creates men obnoxious to no sin, but full of natural innocence, and with capacity for voluntary virtues.'19 So intrenched is free will in nature, that, according to Julian, it is 'just as complete after sins as it was before sins;'20 and what this means may be gathered from Pelagius' definition in the 'Confession of Faith,' that he sent to Innocent: 'We say that man is always able both to sin and not to sin, so as that we may confess that we have free will.' That sin in such circumstances was so common as to be well-nigh universal, was accounted for by the bad example of Adam and the power of habit, the latter being simply the result of imitation of the former. 'Nothing makes well-doing so hard,' writes Pelagius to Demetrias, 'as the long custom of sins which begins from childhood and gradually brings us more and more under its power until it seems to have in some degree the force of nature (vim naturae).' He is even ready to allow for the force of habit in a broad way, on the world at large; and so divides all history into progressive periods, marked by God's (external) grace. At first the light of nature was so strong that men by it alone could live in holiness. And it was only when men's manners became corrupt and tarnished nature began to be insufficient for holy living, that by God's grace the Law was given as an addition to mere nature; and by it 'the original lustre was restored to nature after its blush had been impaired.' And so again, after the habit of sinning once more prevailed among men, and 'the law became unequal to the task of curing it,'21 Christ was given, furnishing men with forgiveness of sins, exhortations to imitation of the example and the holy example itself.22 But though thus a progressive deterioration was confessed, and such a deterioration as rendered desirable at least two supernatural interpositions (in the giving of the law and the coming of Christ), yet no corruption of nature, even by growing habit, is really allowed. It was only an ever-increasing facility in imitating vice which arose from so long a schooling in evil; and all that was needed to rescue men from it was a new explanation of what was right (in the law), or, at the most, the encouragement of forgiveness for what was already done, and a holy example (in Christ) for imitation. Pelagius still asserted our continuous possession of 'a free will which is unimpaired for sinning and for not sinning;' and Julian, that 'our free will is just as full after sins as it was before sins;' although Augustine does not fail to twit him with a charge of inconsistency.23


The peculiar individualism of the Pelagian view of the world comes out strongly in their failure to perceive the effect of habit on nature itself. Just as they conceived of virtue as a complex of virtuous acts, so they conceived of sin exclusively as an act, or series of disconnected acts. They appear not to have risen above the essentially heathen view which had no notion of holiness apart from a series of acts of holiness, or of sin apart from a like series of sinful acts.24 Thus the will was isolated from its acts, and the acts from each other, and all organic connection or continuity of life was not only overlooked but denied.25 After each act of the will, man stood exactly where he did before: indeed, this conception scarcely allows for the existence of a 'man' — only a willing machine is left, at each click of the action of which the spring regains its original position, and is equally ready as before to reperform its function. In such a conception there was no place for character: freedom of will was all. Thus it was not an unnatural mistake which they made, when they forgot the man altogether, and attributed to the faculty of free will, under the name of 'possibilitas' or 'posse,' the ability that belonged rather to the man whose faculty it is, and who is properly responsible for the use he makes of it. Here lies the essential error of their doctrine of free will: they looked upon freedom in its form only, and not in its matter; and, keeping man in perpetual and hopeless equilibrium between good and evil, they permitted no growth of character and no advantage to himself to be gained by man in his successive choices of good. It need not surprise us that the type of thought which thus dissolved the organism of the man into a congeries of disconnected voluntary acts, failed to comprehend the solidarity of the race. To the Pelagian, Adam was a man, nothing more; and it was simply unthinkable that any act of his that left his own subsequent acts uncommitted, could entail sin and guilt upon other men. The same alembic that dissolved the individual into a succession of voluntary acts, could not fail to separate the race into a heap of unconnected units. If sin, as Julian declared, is nothing but will, and the will itself remained intact after each act, how could the individual act of an individual will condition the acts of men as yet unborn? By 'imitation' of his act alone could (under such a conception) other men be affected. And this carried with it the corresponding view of man's relation to Christ. He could forgive us the sins we had committed; He could teach us the true way; He could set us a holy example; and He could exhort us to its imitation. But He could not touch us to enable us to will the good, without destroying the absolute equilibrium of the will between good and evil; and to destroy this was to destroy its freedom, which was the crowning good of our divinely created nature. Surely the Pelagians forgot that man was not made for will, but will for man.
In defending their theory, as we are told by Augustine, there were five claims that they especially made for it.26 It allowed them to praise as was their due, the creature that God had made, the marriage that He had instituted, the law that He had given, the free will which was His greatest endowment to man, and the saints who had followed His counsels. By this they meant that they proclaimed the sinless perfection of human nature in every man as he was brought into the world, and opposed this to the doctrine of original sin; the purity and holiness of marriage and the sexual appetites, and opposed this to the doctrine of the transmission of sin; the ability of the law, as well as and apart from the gospel, to bring men into eternal life, and opposed this to the necessity of inner grace; the integrity of free will to choose the good, and opposed this to the necessity of divine aid; and the perfection of the lives of the saints, and opposed this to the doctrine of universal sinfulness. Other questions, concerning the origin of souls, the necessity of baptism for infants, the original immortality of Adam, lay more on the skirts of the controversy, and were rather consequences of their teaching than parts of it. As it was an obvious fact that all men died, they could not admit that Adam's death was a consequence of sin lest they should be forced to confess that his sin had injured all men; they therefore asserted that physical death belonged to the very nature of man, and that Adam would have died even had he not sinned.27 So, as it was impossible to deny that the Church everywhere baptized infants, they could not refuse them baptism without confessing themselves innovators in doctrine; and therefore they contended that infants were not baptized for forgiveness of sins, but in order to attain a higher state of salvation. Finally, they conceived that if it was admitted that souls were directly created by God for each birth, it could not be asserted that they came into the world soiled by sin and under condemnation; and therefore they loudly championed this theory of the origin of souls.


The teachings of the Pelagians, it will be readily seen, easily welded themselves into a system, the essential and formative elements of which were entirely new in the Christian Church; and this startlingly new reading of man's condition, powers, and dependence for salvation, it was, that broke like a thunderbolt upon the Western Church at the opening of the fifth century, and forced her to reconsider, from the foundations, her whole teaching as to man and his salvation.


For the rest, see:
http://www.monergism.com/thethreshold/articles/onsite/augpel.html

Saturday, March 13, 2010

B.B. Warfield’s “Faith and Life,” 1-13


1. We offer some observations on B.B. Warfield’s “Faith and Life” (Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1974), 1-13.

2. Tim Naab, a correspondent at “Exposing the False Prophets—Reformation Christians Against TBN” made an interesting comment recently. Tim has 50 years in Pentecostalism and his parents and grandparents go back to the original movement.
Facebookhttp://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=308173344359

3. We asked Tim about the Pentecostalist definition of “faith” in that Arminianized and Montanist world. He noted that it is “faith in one’s faith,” rather than the object of faith, Christ. This impelled this scribe to pull Warfield’s timely classic off the shelf. Warfield is a good start but we commend readers to a salutary summary of saving faith in the Wesminster Confession, Chapter 15, at: http://www.reformed.org/documents/index.html?mainframe=http://www.reformed.org/documents/westminster_conf_of_faith.html

4. Warfield develops an instructive devotional article entitled “The Cause of God” in relation to Elijah.

5. Elijah is a story of fidelity to God when apostasy and infidelity reigned in Israel. We know nothing about his background or training, but he emerges in 1 Kings before an idolatrous king Ahab and a wayward, indifferent, lawless, autonomous, defiant and self-exalting generation. Elijah appears thunderously, but he also disappears in the story to a desolate and forlorn tract of land and caves.

6. Elijah sought to awaken Israel to its demise in doctrine, worship and piety. He called for repentance, reform and renewal. Drought, fire from heaven, famine, and death for enemies of His Majesty follow Elijah’s ministry. We may well imagine something of sternness in demeanour, fearlessness, and courage. He reminds us of John the Baptist.

7. Several lessons are helpful, although we digress from Professor B.B. Warfield, the “Lion of Princeton.”

8. Following Elijah’s appearance of vigour and preaching in Israel, we find him secluded and sequestered by the brook Cherith in Jordan, fed by ravens. We find him discouraged and despairing. The tough prophet learned in suffering, as would St. Paul (2 Cor.12.1ff). In despair at the large rejection of his message, he learned that God had elected “7000 who have not bowed the knee to Baal.”

9. By Emergents’ standards like Brian McClaren, Elijah hadn’t adjusted himself to doctrinal haziness, vagueness, and uncertainty about truth. We can hear it, “C’mon Elijah, let’s just trim the sails, shall we? What’s with all the Law? And the Word of God as the `Constitution of the Church’? Please. This OT-stuff about justice and holiness is too much.” We refer the reader to the recent panel discussion hosted by Dr. Al Mohler re: Brian McClaren’s “Generous Orthodoxy.” McClaren wouldn't get any hearing from Elijah or John the Baptist.

10. By TBN standards as well as our’s we might add, Elijah had the “signs and wonders.” Unlike TBN, Pentecostalists, and charismatics, we do not believe that God ordinarily works “signs and wonders.“ Read the Bible. We are developing this in other threads. The Bible teaches that God does not work this way. We confess the words and wisdom of the Westminster Confession of Faith, chapter 5, paragraph 3, to wit, that “God, in his ordinary providence, maketh use of means, yet is free to work without, above, and against them, at his pleasure.” We’re not Protestant liberals; we believe in miracles. But God ordinarily uses means. We affirm that God has and did perform “signs and wonders” at significant junctures in redemptive history, e.g. Moses, Elijah, and the days of Christ. However, in the vast, vast, vast, vast reaches of the centuries within the Bible, God normally did not do that. Just read the Bible TBN-Pentecostalist devotees. Here these Montanists go off the deep-end, here as elsewhere. We confess the great “signs and wonders” of Elijah. But we deny that they were normative throughout subsequent months and years in Israel’s history.

11. On another front, by mega-church standards of numbers, church growth, techniques and strategies. Elijah was a “Chief-of-Failure-dom.” Elijah complains, “I, I only, am left,” as if God’s work ever rested on Elijah, techniques, and church-growth formulas in the first place. Elijah had some maturing to do. We can hear Elijah-turn-mega-growth strategist, “Lord, I didn’t have the questionnaires, demographic studies, formulas or messages tuned to `felt needs.’ I got it wrong about the idolaters.” As if God’s work was vanquished in the land by massive apostasy. As if the message had to be diluted to accommodate Ahab, Jezebel, the Baal worshippers and the idolatrous Israelites. As if there were no “elect left” and true Gospel preaching was a failure. As if God was going to fail. As if God was going to desert His sovereign covenant promises to Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses and so many others. As if numbers mattered. We surely gain encouragement in preaching the Law and Gospel, irrespective of numbers, strategies, or responses. Elijah happened to live in "postmodern times" (what a term).

12. Some, including myself, refer to "evangellifishdom." Such pull the Pharisee trump card as their technique of avoidance when false doctrine is confronted or biblical doctrine is positively confessed. Other wild cards: "Judgment Card," "Unloving Card, and" Divisive Card" are played routinely but incorrrectly. Of course, it's true as justified sinners. We must really we see that were born apostates, are justified by Christ's grace alone, and to beat our breast like the sinner in Luke 18.9ff. We'll be doing that until we're old with gray hairs. On the other hand, we're not rolling over for these indifferentists with pietist retreats as covers for sloth, indifference or fear. In God's name, we're not doing that. We confess the faith kindly, humbly, but directly and clearly. There are "boundaries," Confessional ones. By the way, evangellifish wouldn't have the time of day for Elijah either; Elijah was divisive, judgmental, unkind, self-righteous and Pharsaical.

12. Fidelity, courage, honour and commitment. Elijah was consistent in doctrine, word and piety with Paul’s advice to Timothy in 2 Tim.4.1-5.

“1 In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge: 2 Preach the Word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage—with great patience and careful instruction. 3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. 4 They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths. 5 But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry.

13. We have no choice. We cannot follow the modern cop-outs like Hybels and Warren. We cannot follow the new Liberals like McClaren. We cannot follow the Montanist Frenzysts.

14. Thank God that God is what and who He has disclosed Himself to be in “True Churches” with the true and biblical marks as such. Thank God for His fidelity to His Catholic, Confessional and True Churches, and to us, our children and grandchildren, as well as fellow-believers. We live in troubled times, but we live in the joy and confidence that God is sovereign, gracious and faithful.

B.B. Warfield's "Counterfeit Miracles," 3-20


1. Some observations from B.B. Warfield’s “Counterfeit Miracles” (London, UK: Banner of Truth, 1972), 3-20.

2. The NT refers to spiritual gifts in the ordinary and extraordinary senses with God as the source. There are non-miraculous gracious gifts and the greatest gifts of faith, love and hope.

3. Churches throughout the apostolic period, planted by the Apostles at length, reflected gifts. Healings, miracles, prophecies, discernment of spirits, tongues (foreign languages) and their interpretation, preaching, teaching and the sacraments were characteristic of the churches. However, far from being possessed by all, it appeared extremely limited and narrowed to some elect individuals. 1 Cor. 12.1-3: The Spirit gives has He sovereignly determines, freely, mightily and as He was pleased to do.

4. The theologians of the post-Reformation were a “very clear-headed body of men” who taught with “great distinctiveness that the charismata ceased with the Apostolic age.”

5. Some theologians teach that the extraordinary gifts continued for three centuries after the apostolic period. One Anglican school of thought believes this.

6. Archbishop Tillotson is of this view. After the founding of the church throughout the world, “God was pleased to accompany it with a miraculous power; but after it was planted, that power ceased, and God left it to be maintained by ordinary ways.” John Wesley held this view, but believed that corruption led to the cessation of the extraordinary gifts. Several other Anglicans leaders held this view.

7. Warfield notes that there is much that is attractive, even plausible. However, he will later debunk the continuationist view. As to non-cessationism, “The facts are not in accordance with it.”

8. There is no evidence whatsoever of miracle-working in the first fifty years following the post-Apostolic church. In fact, the testimony is that of diminishment, decrease, and disinterest. Following that post-Apostolic period, there is a minor interest in it; there is some growing interest in it in the third century (the days of Montanism); there is evidence for it in the fourth and fifth centuries; the fourth and succeeding interest show interest in the subject, especially for Medeival Romanists trafficking like modern-day Pentecostalists. However, in the early period, there is little to no interest or explicit reference to them. We would say there was waning interest even in the book of Acts. Other than 1 Corinthians, all the Pauline epistles in the doctrinal and ethics sections show no interest in tongues, healings, or exorcisms. Same for the other epistles, as well as Revelation. We assert Pentecostals are frenzied ecstatics and are unhinged.

9. Justin Martyr notes that some had the gift of exorcism, healing and prophecy, but he gives no details, cites no cases, and shows no interest in the development of the issue. It’s by no means clear that he is referring to contemporaneous events or backwards to the apostolic and post-Apostlic period. His disinterest at development serves as a reminder that the modern Montanists, these Pentecostalists, are imbalanced, unhinged and are dominionistically demonic.

10. Irenaeus (d.202) writes to the same effect, with generality, lack of specificity, lack of development, and without large interest in the subject. He does mention tongues and raising the dead, but not as an eyewitness or worker of them. But, it appears that Irenaeus is speaking of the apostolic period. Ireneaus is at pains to compare and contrast the apostolic miracles long before him with the meager claims of heathen magic-workers.

11. Theophylus of Antioch (c.412) was challenged about reports of raisings from the dead. One such challenge came from Autolycus. The latter expected the former to attempt a defense. To the antagonist's suprise, the Christian Churchman, Theophylus, said that “there was no instance of this” for three centuries. Benny Hinn, however, predicts that relatives will bring caskets to the TV, touch it, and will be raised. Todd Bentley has claimed dozens.

12. Tertullian, Cyprian and Origen refer to exorcisms, healings, and prophecy without any reference to themselves as practicing or producing them.

13. Warfield’s point is that the middle of the second century contains references that are general as noted above.

Philip Schaff is quoted: “It is remarkable that the genuine writings of the ante-Nicene church are more free from miraculous and superstitious elements than the annals of the Nicene age and the Middle Ages…Most of the statement of the apologists are couched in general terms, and refer to extraordinary cures from demoniacal possession…and other diseases…Justin Martyr speaks of such occurrences as frequent…and Origen appeals to his own personal observation, but speaks in another place of the growing scarcity of miracles.” History of the Christian Church, Vol. 2, 117.

Again, re: Origen, “But there were signs from the Holy Spirit at the beginning of Christ’s teaching, and after His ascension He exhibited more, but subsequently fewer.” Origen, while noting some miracles in his time, observed that for all practical purposes, they had ceased.

14. Eusebius notes one resurrection from the dead, one in Philip’s house, the deacon of the apostolic church. Papias reported this. However, it was so uncommon by context, that it’s miraculousness was significant to Papias. Papias, a direct student and disciple of John the Apostle all but implies that “signs, wonders, and miracles” were not even common place. Barnard remarks: “If they were frequent, if he had even seen one himself, he would have told us of it, or to speak more accurately, Eusebius would not have selected for quotation a second-hand story, if evidence of a direct eyewitness was on record.” J.H. Bernard, any essay entitled “The Miraculous in Early Christian Literature” in a volume called “The Literature of the Second Century.” We would add another detail re: Papias, St. John’s disciple, that he wrote a 5-volume commentary on the Gospels. A few notes here: 1) The work did not survive except for fragments. It was probably confiscated in imperial “book burnings” including NT canons. 2) This involvement with the Gospels indicates that Biblical exposition was essential to church life.

15. Romanists have long catalogues of miracles, called teratology or teratoliges. More later on that. Pentecostalists, with their crafty and blasphemous Arminianism, fit in with the Romanists as well as the false Gospel.