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

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Calvin's Institutes.4.7.20: Honk if you love Petrine Supremacy


Calvin’s Institutes, IV.7.19-22: “Later Papal claims contrary to principles of Gregory 1 and Bernard, 19-22”

IV.4.7.20: “New Forgeries Support Extravagant Claims”
Observations:

1. Rome “substitutes” the names of "ancient pontiffs" in later forged decretals, as if the ancients ruled like the modernists (of Calvin’s day). A reading back into history what did not exist. This entire section is an unhappy tableaux about a very unhappy family, Romanism. Their outdoor plans for victory rallies envisioned by modern popularists are "rained out" by Calvin's muscular review of chaos. The gilded resume of the Papacy is infrequenty addressed.

2. Calvin cites a forged letter from Anastasius, bp. of Constantinople, which states that Rome is supreme and all cases are to be reviewed and appealed to her. It's all very Clintonesque. ECT devotees, like Colson and Packer, are mum on the issues although the history of the Papacy is bollixed by the truth and light of day.

3. Calvin says: “Antichrists be carried to the point of madness and blindness…” He includes Gregory IX, the Gratian Decretals (previously noted), the Clementines and the Extravagantes of Martin. The long term effect 0f Calvin's argument thus far has been to silence the sacrileges of Papal pride.

4. Although not cited by Calvin, another figure calls Gregory IX an “Antichrist.”
Eberhard II von Truchsees, Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg, Council of Regensburg (1241), declared that Gregory IX was "that man of perdition, whom they call Antichrist, who in his extravagant boasting says, `I am God, I cannot err'" [emphasis added]. See below.

5. Calvin says: “…still more openly and boisterously breathe out everywhere an unrestrained fury and tyranny like that of barbarian kings.”

6. Papal claims during Calvin’s times: “The Pope cannot err, that the pope is above councils, that the pope is the universal bishop of all churches and the supreme head of the church on earth.”
Benedict XVI has perfect “lip sync” with the past, but sings pianissimo. Petrine supremacy was and still is the backbone of the Romanist Creed. Benedict XVI is a "taped vocalist" for his predecessors.

7. Calvin: “I forebear to mention their more absurd follies, which the stupid canonists babble in their schools, and which, the Romanist theologians, to flatter their idol, not only assent to, but even applaud.” Calvin is ruthlessly clear here. It reminds of the clarity of still-standing confessional document of Confessional Lutherans, The Smalcald Articles, 1537.
The Papacy is a tangle of a pernicious undergrowth that chokes healthy plants, if allowed.

Correlations:

1. We take a brief tour of Pope Gregory IX to whom Calvin refers. (Pope: 1227 to 1241). We will summarize highpoints from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Gregory_IX.

As the successor of Pope Honorius III (1216–27), he inherited the traditions of Pope Gregory VII (1073–85) and his uncle, Pope Innocent III (1198-1216).

Gregory IX zealously continued the policy of Papist supremacy. As the Cardinal of Ostia and as a close man in the pope's shop of bishops and archbishops, close to Pope Honorius III, he was aware of Honorius’s policy of accommodation with the formidable Hohenstaufen Emperor, Frederick II (1220–50). Gregory would not embrace his predecessor's policy of accommodation.
Frederick asserted his position as universal temporal ruler after the mold of Constantine.
Gregory IX, however, began his tub-thumping pontifications by suspending the Emperor. Other Papist bobbleheads in Rome agreed to the political burlesque. Threats of deposition and excommunication followed while Frederick was delaying in Sicily over the Sixth Crusade.
Frederick II controlled the Sicilian Church along with holding other feudal obligations to the Pope (e.g. Naples, Capua). Where's the Pepto Bismol? As if St. Peter and St. Paul acted like this.
Gregory IX denounced Frederick II as a heretic and summoned a council to Rome. Frederick II attempted to capture or sink as many ships carrying prelates to the synod.

Eberhard II von Truchsees, Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg, at the Council of Regensburg declared that Gregory IX was "that man of perdition, whom they call Antichrist, who in his extravagant boasting says, I am God, I cannot err." [emphasis added]
He argued that the Pope was the "little horn" of Daniel 7:8. Protestant Reformers by no means were the original claimants of such.

Based on Daniel 7.8, Eberhard said of Gregory IX: “…the little horn has grown up with eyes and mouth speaking great things, which is reducing three of these kingdoms--i.e. Sicily, Italy, and Germany--to subserviency, is persecuting the people of Christ and the saints of God with intolerable opposition, is confounding things human and divine, and is attempting things unutterable, execrable." [emphasis added] It is to be remembered that 98% of the people were uninvolved and that this burlesque involved aristocrats and Popes--a day when communication was very limited. Some players who were involved, like Eberhard 11, were more than clanging cymbals and noise-makers. They saw the gilded turd--one kick reveals the hot, steamy interior.

The struggle ended Gregory IX’s death (August 1241).

A learned lawyer, Gregory caused to be prepared the Nova Compilatio decretalium in 1234. This New Compilation of Decretals was the culmination of a long process of collecting the mass of pronouncements on Petrine sovereignty made earlier. (A point rigourously denied by Gregory the Great, 590-604.) This had come to fruition in the Decretum started earlier with the papist lawyer, Gratian (1140); this further advanced the foundation for papal legal theory.

In 1231, he initiated the Papal Inquisition to handle heresy.

Gregory IX institutionalized Church teaching that condemned Jews to an inferior status in Christendom. In the 1234 Decretals, he authorized the doctrine of perpetua servitus iudaeorum – perpetual servitude of the Jews. The Jews would remain in a condition of political servitude and humiliation until Judgment Day.

This papist doctrine found its way into the legal code under the Emperor's authority; this was promulgated by Frederick II. The status of condemnation and political subjection of Jews would last until the 19th century.

As a minor aside to the larger issue of Petrine sovereignty, Gregory IX's papal letter, Vox in Rama (1232), identified “cats” as instruments of the devil and as symbols of heresy. Another claim ab ignorantia et ad ignorantiam. This led to a great reduction in the number of cats, which, a hundred years later, contributed to the quick spread of the Black Death plague, which killed 1/3 to 1/2 of the population of Europe. (Cf. Dr. Daniel Robinson’s lecture on “Witchcraft,” Great Ideas in Philosophy, Teaching Company for similar allegations.)
Interpretation:
Calvin's summary of the Papacy continues apace and debreeds the Gordian knot of supremacistic tub-thumping for Petrine supremacy. Calvin speaks with boldness, majesty, and strong presumptive evidence, unlike Romanist mountebanks and unlike the discreditable pragmatists, enthusiasts and obscurantists of our day (Colson, Christianity Today, etc., contemporary evangelicals).

The Disturbing Legacy of Charles Finney

We like much of what is offered at White Horse Inn. For that matter, Bishop FitzSimmons Allison does too. One minor caveat here--the title. We would have preferred the title: "The Wicked Abominations of an Heretic, Charles Finney, and His Evangelical Enablers." Otherwise, an excellent article.

The Disturbing Legacy of Charles Finney
by Dr. Michael Horton

No single man is more responsible for the distortion of Christian truth in our age than Charles Grandison Finney. His "new measures" created a framework for modern decision theology and Evangelical Revivalism. In this excellent article, Dr. Mike Horton explains how Charles Finney distorted the important doctrine of salvation.

Jerry Falwell calls him "one of my heroes and a hero to many evangelicals, including Billy Graham." I recall wandering through the Billy Graham Center some years ago, observing the place of honor given to Charles Finney in the evangelical tradition, reinforced by the first class in theology I had at a Christian college, where Finney’s work was required reading. The New York revivalist was the oft-quoted and celebrated champion of the Christian singer Keith Green and the Youth With A Mission organization. He is particularly esteemed among the leaders of the Christian Right and the Christian Left, by both Jerry Falwell and Jim Wallis (Sojourners’ magazine), and his imprint can be seen in movements that appear to be diverse, but in reality are merely heirs to Finney’s legacy. From the Vineyard movement and the Church Growth Movement to the political and social crusades, televangelism, and the Promise Keepers movement, as a former Wheaton College president rather glowingly cheered, "Finney, lives on!"

That is because Finney’s moralistic impulse envisioned a church that was in large measure an agency of personal and social reform rather than the institution in which the means of grace, Word and Sacrament, are made available to believers who then take the Gospel to the world. In the nineteenth century, the evangelical movement became increasingly identified with political causes-from abolition of slavery and child labor legislation to women’s rights and the prohibition of alcohol. In a desperate effort at regaining this institutional power and the glory of "Christian America" (a vision that is always powerful in the imagination, but, after the disintegration of Puritan New England, elusive), the turn-of-the century Protestant establishment launched moral campaigns to "Americanize" immigrants, enforce moral instruction and "character education." Evangelists pitched their American gospel in terms of its practical usefulness to the individual and the nation.

That is why Finney is so popular. He is the tallest marker in the shift from Reformation orthodoxy, evident in the Great Awakening (under Edwards and Whitefield) to Arminian (indeed, even Pelagian) revivalism. evident from the Second Great Awakening to the present. To demonstrate the debt of modern evangelicalism to Finney, we must first notice his theological departures. From these departures, Finney became the father of the antecedents to some of today’s greatest challenges within evangelical churches, namely, the church growth movement, Pentecostalism and political revivalism.

Who is Finney?

Reacting against the pervasive Calvinism of the Great Awakening, the successors of that great movement of God’s Spirit turned from God to humans, from the preaching of objective content (namely, Christ and him crucified) to the emphasis on getting a person to "make a decision."

Charles Finney (1792-1875) ministered in the wake of the "Second Awakening," as it has been called. A Presbyterian layover, Finney one day experienced "a mighty baptism of the Holy Ghost" which "like a wave of electricity going through and through me ... seemed to come in waves of liquid love." The next morning, he informed his first client of the day, "I have a retainer from the Lord Jesus Christ to plead his cause and I cannot plead yours. "Refusing to attend Princeton Seminary (or any seminary, for that matter). Finney began conducting revivals in upstate New York. One of his most popular sermons was "Sinners Bound to Change Their Own Hearts."

Finney’s one question for any given teaching was, "Is it fit to convert sinners with?" One result of Finney’s revivalism was the division of Presbyterians in Philadelphia and New York into Arminian and Calvinistic factions. His "New Measures" included the "anxious bench" (precursor to today’s altar call), emotional tactics that led to fainting and weeping, and other "excitements," as Finney and his followers called them.

Finney’s Theology?

One need go no further than the table of contents of his Systematic Theology to learn that Finney’s entire theology revolved around human morality. Chapters one through five are on moral government, obligation, and the unity of moral action; chapters six and seven are "Obedience Entire," as chapters eight through fourteen discuss attributes of love, selfishness, and virtues and vice in general. Not until the twenty-first chapter does one read anything that is especially Christian in its interest, on the atonement. This is followed by a discussion of regeneration, repentance, and faith. There is one chapter on justification followed by six on sanctification. In other words, Finney did not really write a Systematic Theology, but a collection of essays on ethics.

But that is not to say that Finney’s Systematic Theology does not contain some significant statements of theology.

First, in answer to the question, "Does a Christian cease to be a Christian, whenever he commits a sin?", Finney answers:

"Whenever he sins, he must, for the time being, cease to be holy. This is self-evident. Whenever he sins, he must be condemned; he must incur the penalty of the law of God ... If it be said that the precept is still binding upon him, but that with respect to the Christian, the penalty is forever set aside, or abrogated, I reply, that to abrogate the penalty is to repeal the precept, for a precept without penalty is no law. It is only counsel or advice. The Christian, therefore, is justified no longer than he obeys, and must be condemned when he disobeys or Antinomianism is true ... In these respects, then, the sinning Christian and the unconverted sinner are upon precisely the same ground (p. 46)."

Finney believed that God demanded absolute perfection, but instead of that leading him to seek his perfect righteousness in Christ, he concluded that "... full present obedience is a condition of justification. But again, to the question, can man be justified while sin remains in him? Surely he cannot, either upon legal or gospel principles, unless the law be repealed ... But can he be pardoned and accepted, and justified, in the gospel sense, while sin, any degree of sin, remains in him? Certainly not" (p. 57).

Finney declares of the Reformation’s formula simul justus et peccator or "simultaneously justified and sinful," "This error has slain more souls, I fear, than all the Universalism that ever cursed the world." For, "Whenever a Christian sins he comes under condemnation, and must repent and do his first works, or be lost" (p.60).

Finney’s doctrine of justification rests upon a denial of the doctrine of original sin. Held by both Roman Catholics and Protestants, this biblical teaching insists that we are all born into this world inheriting Adam’s guilt and corruption. We are, therefore, in bondage to a sinful nature. As someone has said, "We sin because we’re sinners": the condition of sin determines the acts of sin, rather than vice versa. But Finney followed Pelagius, the fifth-century heretic, who was condemned by more church councils than any other person in church history, in denying this doctrine.

Finney believed that human beings were capable of choosing whether they would be corrupt by nature or redeemed, referring to original sin as an "anti-scriptural and nonsensical dogma" (p.179). In clear terms, Finney denied the notion that human beings possess a sinful nature (ibid.). Therefore, if Adam leads us into sin, not by our inheriting his guilt and corruption, but by following his poor example, this leads logically to the view of Christ, the Second Adam, as saving by example. This is precisely where Finney takes it, in his explanation of the atonement.

The first thing we must note about the atonement, Finney says, is that Christ could not have died for anyone else’s sins than his own. His obedience to the law and his perfect righteousness were sufficient to save him, but could not legally be accepted on behalf of others. That Finney’s whole theology is driven by a passion for moral improvement is seen on this very point: "If he [Christ] had obeyed the Law as our substitute, then why should our own return to personal obedience be insisted upon as a sine qua non of our salvation" (p.206)? In other words, why would God insist that we save ourselves by our own obedience if Christ’s work was sufficient? The reader should recall the words of St. Paul in this regard, "I do not nullify the grace of God’, for if justification comes through the law, then Christ died for nothing." It would seem that Finney’s reply is one of agreement. The difference is, he has no difficulty believing both of those premises.

That is not entirely fair, of course, because Finney did believe that Christ died for something—not for someone, but for something. In other words, he died for a purpose, but not for people. The purpose of that death was to reassert God’s moral government and to lead us to eternal life by example, as Adam’s example excited us to sin. Why did Christ die? God knew that "The atonement would present to creatures the highest possible motives to virtue. Example is the highest moral influence that can be exerted ... If the benevolence manifested in the atonement does not subdue the selfishness of sinners, their case is hopeless" (p.209). Therefore, we are not helpless sinners who need to,’ be redeemed, but wayward sinners who need a demonstration of selflessness so moving that we will be excited to leave off selfishness. Not only did Finney believe that the "moral influence" theory of the atonement was the chief way of understanding the cross; he explicitly denied the substitutionary atonement, which

"assumes that the atonement was a literal payment of a debt, which we have seen does not consist with the nature of the atonement ... It is true, that the atonement, of itself, does not secure the salvation of any one" (p.217).

Then there is the matter of applying redemption. Throwing off Reformation orthodoxy, Finney argued strenuously against the belief that the new birth is a divine gift, insisting that "regeneration consists in the sinner changing his ultimate choice, intention, preference; or in changing from selfishness to love or benevolence," as moved by the moral influence of Christ’s moving example (p.224). "Original sin, physical regeneration, and all their kindred and resulting dogmas, are alike subversive of the gospel, and repulsive to the human intelligence" (p.236).

Having nothing to do with original sin, a substitutionary atonement, and the supernatural character of the new birth, Finney proceeds to attack "the article by which the church stands or falls"— justification by grace alone through faith alone.

Distorting the Cardinal Doctrine of Justification

The Reformers insisted, on the basis of clear biblical texts, that justification (in the Greek, "to declare righteous," rather than "to make righteous") was a forensic (i.e., legal) verdict. In other words, whereas Rome maintained that justification was a process of making a bad person better, the Reformers argued that it was a declaration or pronouncement that had someone else’s righteousness (i.e., Christ’s) as its basis. Therefore, it was a perfect, once and-for-all verdict of right standing.

This declaration was to be pronounced at the beginning of the Christian life, not in the middle or at the end. The key words in the evangelical doctrine are "forensic" (legal) and "imputation" (crediting one’s account, as opposed to the idea of "infusion" of a righteousness within a person’s soul). Knowing all of this, Finney declares,

"But for sinners to be forensically pronounced just, is impossible and absurd... As we shall see, there are many conditions, while there is but one ground, of the justification of sinners ... As has already been said, there can be no justification in a legal or forensic sense, but upon the ground of universal, perfect, and uninterrupted obedience to law. This is of course denied by those who hold that gospel justification, or the justification of penitent sinners, is of the nature of a forensic or judicial justification. They hold to the legal maxim that what a man does by another he does by himself, and therefore the law regards Christ’s obedience as ours, on the ground that he obeyed for us."

To this, Finney replies: "The doctrine of imputed righteousness, or that Christ’s obedience to the law was accounted as our obedience, is founded on a most false and nonsensical assumption." After all, Christ’s righteousness "could do no more than justify himself. It can never be imputed to us ... it was naturally impossible, then, for him to obey in our behalf " This "representing of the atonement as the ground of the sinner’s justification has been a sad occasion of stumbling to many" (pp.320-2).

The view that faith is the sole condition of justification is "the antinomian view," Finney asserts. "We shall see that perseverance in obedience to the end of life is also a condition of justification. Some theologians have made justification a condition of sanctification, instead of making sanctification a condition of justification. But this we shall see is an erroneous view of the subject." (pp.326-7).

Finney Today

As the noted Princeton theologian B. B. Warfield pointed out so eloquently, there are throughout history only two religions: heathenism, of which Pelagianism is a religious expression, and a supernatural redemption.

With Warfield and those who so seriously warned their brothers and sisters of these errors among Finney and his successors, we too must come to terms with the wildly heterodox strain in American Protestantism. With roots in Finney’s revivalism, perhaps evangelical and liberal Protestantism are not that far apart after all. His "New Measures," like today’s Church Growth Movement, made human choices and emotions the center of the church’s ministry, ridiculed theology, and replaced the preaching of Christ with the preaching of conversion.

It is upon Finney’s naturalistic moralism that the Christian political and social crusades build their faith in humanity and its resources in self-salvation. Sounding not a little like a deist, Finney declared, "There is nothing in religion beyond the ordinary powers of nature. It consists entirely in the right exercise of the powers of nature. It is just that, and nothing else. When mankind becomes truly religious, they are not enabled to put forth exertions which they were unable before to put forth. They only exert powers which they had before, in a different way, and use them for the glory of God." As the new birth is a natural phenomenon for Finney, so too a revival: "A revival is not a miracle, nor dependent on a miracle, in any sense. It is a purely philosophical result of the right use of the constituted means—as much so as any other effect produced by the application of means."

The belief that the new birth and revival depend necessarily on divine activity is pernicious. "No doctrine," he says, "is more dangerous than this to the prosperity of the Church, and nothing more absurd" (Revivals of Religion [Revell], pp.4-5).

When the leaders of the Church Growth Movement claim that theology gets in the way of growth and insist that it does not matter what a particular church believes: growth is a matter of following the proper principles, they are displaying their debt to Finney.

When leaders of the Vineyard movement praise this sub-Christian enterprise and the barking, roaring, screaming, laughing, and other strange phenomena on the basis that "it works" and one must judge its truth by its fruit, they are following Finney as well as the father of American pragmatism, William James, who declared that truth must be judged on the basis of "its cash-value in experiential terms."

Thus, in Finney’s theology, God is not sovereign, man is not a sinner by nature, the atonement is not a true payment for sin, justification by imputation is insulting to reason and morality, the new birth is simply the effect of successful techniques, and revival is a natural result of clever campaigns. In his fresh introduction to the bicentennial edition of Finney’s Systematic Theology, Harry Conn commends Finney’s pragmatism: "Many servants of our Lord should be diligently searching for a gospel that ‘works’, and I am happy to state they can find it in this volume."

As Whitney R. Cross has carefully documented, the stretch of territory in which Finney’s revivals were most frequent was also the cradle of the perfectionistic cults that plagued that century. A gospel that "works" for zealous perfectionists one moment merely creates tomorrow’s disillusioned and spent supersaints. Needless to say, Finney’s message is radically different from the evangelical faith, as is the basic orientation of the movements we see around us today that bear his imprint such as: revivalism (or its modern label. the Church Growth Movement), or Pentecostal perfectionism and emotionalism, or political triumphalism based on the ideal of "Christian America," or the anti-intellectual, and antidoctrinal tendencies of many American evangelicals and fundamentalists.

Not only did the revivalist abandon the doctrine of justification, making him a renegade against evangelical Christianity; he repudiated doctrines, such as original sin and the substitutionary atonement, that have been embraced by Roman Catholics and Protestants alike. Therefore, Finney is not merely an Arminian’, but a Pelagian. He is not only an enemy of evangelical Protestantism, but of historic Christianity of the broadest sort.

Of one thing Finney was absolutely correct: The Gospel held by the Reformers whom he attacked directly, and indeed held by the whole company of evangelicals, is "another gospel" in distinction from the one proclaimed by Charles Finney. The question of our moment is, With which gospel will we side?

(Reprinted by permission from Modern Reformation.)

Unless otherwise specified, all quotes are from Charles G. Finney, Finney’s Systematic Theology (Bethany, 1976).

Dr. Michael S. Horton is Member of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals and cohost of the popular White Horse Inn radio program.

Articles and book excerpts used in and referred to on Issues, Etc.

http://www.mtio.com/articles/aissar81.htm

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

R.C. SPROUL: ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH CONDEMNED THE GOSPEL : Apprising Ministries

R.C. SPROUL: ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH CONDEMNED THE GOSPEL : Apprising Ministries

It's good to lead with this proposition. To wit, Rome condemned the Gospel at Trent and there has been no magisterial emendations to that. By implication, "it" condemned itself.

Of course, any "Anglicans" even talking to Rome without correcting Trent are perfidious and cultic-tribalists operating at the theological level of a peasant.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Coming in January 2010: Caspar Olevianus-Exposition of the Apostles’ Creed « Heidelblog

Coming in January 2010: Caspar Olevianus-Exposition of the Apostles’ Creed « Heidelblog

Posted using ShareThis

Caspar Olevianus was an co-author of that beloved Heidelberg Catechism, 1563, that would have done England well had it been embraced as a consitutive and catecetical tool alongside the XXXIX Articles. It would be hard for an English Reformed scholar or church leader of the English Reformers to have rejected it. the C o E never got past the XXXIX Articles, a useful but immature expression of the Reformation. The exact opposite obtains today---C o E leaders would have a hard time embracing it, given their theological amnesia and obscurantism.

Arminianism

Thanks to Sharon Whitley for her post on "Arminianism." It's one of the enemies on this scribe's daily and evening prayer list. We expect no American Anglicans to have the slightest clue about this--they think because they threw off gay ordinations (whoopi-di-doo enthuse the ACNA-ers), all is well. NOT! They wouldn't even know what the issues are. They hate consistent Calvinism and refuse it. Duncan leads the pack of anti-Calvinists. Look where their leaders were trained.

http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=155212126393&id=1183792930&ref=nf

Warnings from the pulpit and denunciation of the errors of Arminianism are not now heard as once they were. Even in pulpits where the truth is preached, it is to be feared that, in some cases, a faithful witness is not raised against Arminianism. The cause of this may be due in a measure to the fact that in defending the cause of truth new forms of error have to be exposed and assailed, with the result that the old enemy is left so far unmolested as if it were dead. Unfortunately this is not so; Arminianism is very much alive in the pulpit, in the theological and religious press, and in the modem evangelistic meeting . . . . . When we bear in mind the horror with which our forefathers regarded Arminianism, the modern attitude to it indicates how far the professing Church has drifted from the position of the theologians of those days." ('The Reformed Faith I by the Rev. D. Beaton, p. 18).

Arminianism was the false gospel of John Wesley and his followers in the eighteenth century, and of D. L. Moody in the nineteenth. It is the stock-in-trade of well nigh all the popular evangelists of this century from Billy Graham downwards. The gospel halls of the Brethren, Open and Closed, are nurseries of Arminianism. The active agents of the Faith Mission and the Salvation Army, notwithstanding the moral and social results to the credit of the latter, spread the plague on every side. All the sects which have sprung up in these latter times, however divergent in their doctrines and practices -- Jehovah's Witnesses, Seventh Day Adventists, Pentecostalists, Mormons, Christadelphians, Cooneyites, etc., etc., have all in common, the fatal lie of free-willism. It is Satan's sovereign drug, which causes the soul to sleep in delusion, and the end of such delusion is death. "Free will," says Spurgeon, "has carried many souls to hell but never a soul to heaven."

Arminianism is armed to the teeth in enmity to true and vital godliness. Where it flourishes its fruits are a superficial goody-goody form of godliness -- the lamp and the light of the foolish virgins which went out in death and in despair. The Declaratory Acts of 1879, 1892 and 1921 in Scotland, and in 1901 in the Presbyterian Church of New Zealand threw open the flood-gates to the deluge of Arminianism. Spiritual death and desolation followed. The fat land was turned into barrenness, and the Churches adopting these Declaratory Acts are now well on the road to Rome. The 'sovereign drug' of Arminianism has flourished beyond the wildest dreams of priests and Jesuits. It is not by open and unabashed passing of nefarious Declaratory Acts that Satan as an angel of light now works. Subtle infiltration is his present policy and technique. What need there is for the 'denunciation' and the 'horror' the Rev. D. Beaton refers to, as the cloven-hoof of Arminianism is unmistakably seen far within the tents of the popular evangelical conventions, fellowships, and unions of our day! The Scripture Union, the Inter-Varsity Fellowship, the International Council of Christian Churches, the conventions of the Keswick fraternity etc., are all riddled with the cancer of Arminianism.

Taken from the tract "Another Gospel" by Rev. William MacLean, MA, published by the Center for Reformed Theology and Apologetics (CRTA).

Calvin's Institutes.4.7.19. Paedophilic Papist Priests

Calvin’s Institutes, IV.7.19-22: “Later Papal claims contrary to principles of Gregory 1 and Bernard, 19-22”

IV.4.7.19: “The Present-day Papacy in its claim to power”

Observations:

1. Calvin grants that the bishops of Rome, e.g. Leo and Gregory, had wide and extensive jurisdiction, but with the substantial caveats and limits previously noted. By Calvin's time, the Papacy was imperialistic to the core. It still is. As an aside, for the discerning, they will understand the paedophilia scandals in light of the historic and standing legal and moral claims made by the Pontiffs. With respect to paedophilic priests skirting and avoiding legal prosecution, the American Archbishops and Bishops were following orders--secrecy and remandment of all such cases to Rome for secret adjudication...without any civil interference. The American press, including the Boston Globe and Herald, never understood or covered the deeper legal, decretive and historic issues. Although no Papist (in my case), I had intimate details of paedophilic Chaplains in the military, having helped the press to "out" the corruption in very high levels. Trust me, the stories were ugly, including top leadership maneouvres of Papists, including one Chief of Chaplains (a Papist Admiral). I made enemies, but then, as a Psalm-singing Calvinist, a Prayer Book praying Anglican, and Bible-reading Christian man, to hell with the Papist doctrines and attitudes in Rome! As a Prayer Book man, I pray daily, "Good Lord, spare us the gross and detestable enormities of Rome." 10 AM and 4 PM daily. Count on it. It was no mistake that Papist paedophilic priests were "shielded,""covered up," "forgiven," and "re-shuffled" to another environment by their Bishops (Papist). I knew a lawyer, a Romanist, from TX with divinity degrees from Un. of Louvain, who was outraged and a class action lawyer for victims. He gave me copies of the secret orders as well as the "Liturgy for Penitent Priests." Have it around here somewhere. Instructive below will be Clement VI's correspondence; where it can get away with it, Rome claims its own universal jurisdiction.

2. Given that, however, Calvin draws astute and vigorous contrasts between Gregory’s days and Calvin’s days.

3. The false bishops of Calvin’s day claim: “…declare with great arrogance that the power to command is in their hands while with others rests the necessity to obey.”

4. “All their pronouncements are to be so received as if confirmed by Peter’s voice.”

5. “That provincial synods, because they do not have the pope present, have no force.”

6. “That they themselves have power to ordain clergy for any church whatsoever.”

7. “And to summon to their see those ordained elsewhere.”

8. Calvin notes he could recite other “reservations” of power claimed by Rome, but he halts “lest I bore my other readers unduly.”

9. Calvin’s great objection in this section is unbridled and unaccountable powers. He says: “…they leave o jurisdiction on earth to control or retrain their lust if they abuse such boundless power…no one has the right to review the judgments of this see…it will be judged neither by emperor, nor by kings, nor by all the clergy, nor by the people….This is the height of imperiousness for one man to set himself up as judge of all, and suffer himself to obey the judgment of none.”

Correlations:

1. The Second Vatican Council’s Decree on Ecumenism explains: “For it is through Christ’s Catholic Church alone, which is the universal help towards salvation, that through the fullness of the means of salvation can be obtained. It was to be the apostolic college alone, of which Peter is the head, that we believe that our Lord entrusted all the blessings of the New Covenant, in order to establish on earth one Body of Christ into which all those who should be fully incorporated who belong in any way to the People of God.” (CCC, 816).

2. Bull, Unam Sanctum, 18 Nov 1302 by Boniface VIII: “With Faith urging us we are forced to believe and to hold the one, holy, Catholic Church and that, apostolic outside of which there is no salvation nor remission of sin, the Spouse in the Canticle proclaiming, `One is my dove, my perfect one. One she is of her mother, the chosen of her that bore her [Cant.6.8]…certainly Noe had one ark at the time of the flood…and we are taught by evangelical words that in this power of his are two swords, namely spiritual and temporal…Therefore, each is in the power of the Church, that is, a spiritual and temporal sword…It is necessary that we confess the more clearly that spiritual power precedes any earthly power both in dignity and nobility, as spiritual matters themselves excel the temporal…Therefore, if earthly power deviates, it will be judged by spiritual power; but if a lesser spiritual power deviates, by its superior; but if the supreme (spiritual power deviates), it can be judged by God alone, not by man, as the Apostle testifies: `The spiritual man judges all things, but he himself is judged by no one.’[1 Cor.2.15]…Furthermore, we declare, say, define, and proclaim to every human creature that they by necessity of salvation are entirely subject to the Roman Pontiff.” [emphasis added] Henry Denzinger, The Sources of Catholic Dogma (Fitzwilliam, NH: Loreto Publications, 1954. Nihil obstat: Dominic Hughes, OP, Censor Deputatus and Imprimatur by ABP Patrick O’Boyle, Washington, 1955.

3. Clement VI, Super quibusdam, a letter to the Consolator, the Catholicon of the Armenians, 20 Sept 1351. A few clips from the lengthy letter:

a. “Peter received complete power of jurisdiction over all faithful Christian from our Lord Jesus Christ.”

b. “…the same plenitude in the jurisdiction of power over the complete and universal body of the militant church which Peter himself received from our Lord Jesus Christ.”

c. “…the legitimate vicars of Christ and full of power in the highest degree, have received immediately from Christ Himself over the complete and universal body of the church militant, every jurisdiction of power which Christ s fitting head had in human life.”

d. “…have been able, are able, and will be able directly by our own power and theirs [PV, theirs = successors from the context] both to judge all those subject to our jurisdiction and theirs, an to establish and delegate judges to whomsoever we wish.”

e. “…Roman Pontiffs who have been, of us who are, and those who in the future will be, has been, is and will be so extensive, that by no one have they been, can we be, or will they in the future be able to be judged; but they have been, we are, and they will be reserved for judgment by God alone; and that from our sentences and judgments it has not been possible nor will it be possible for an appeal to be made to any judges.”

f. “…that it is possible to transfer patriarchs, the Catholicon, the archbishops, bishops, abbots, and whatsoever prelates from the offices in which they have been established to other offices of greater or lesser jurisdiction, or, as their sins demand, to demote, to depose, excommunicate, or to surrender them to Satan.”

g. “…Pontifical authority cannot or ought not be subject to any imperial or regal or other secular power, in so far as pertains to a judicial institution, to correction or to deposition.” [PV, we add that these claims are the legal underpinnings—unexplored by the press—in the paedophilia cases. The Archbishops and Bishops were “secretly” following orders from Rome.]

h. “…the Roman Pontiff alone is able to establish sacred general canons, to grant plenary indulgences to hose who visit he thresholds of the apostles, Peter and Paul, or those who go to the Holy Land…”

i. “…who are obedient to the Roman Pontiff…who observe studiously and with devotion the forms and rites of the Roman Church in the administration of the sacraments and in ecclesiastical duties, fasts, and other ceremonies do well, and by doing this merit eternal life.” Henry Denzinger, The Sources of Catholic Dogma, 203-206.

Interpretation:

Calvin correctly draws an extremely powerful contrast between the days of Gregory 1 and those of his own time. There is no accountability or correction for infallible Popes with their doctrinal fictions and their "half-Christ."

BabyBlueOnline: Canterbury left in an "awkward position" with a "sore ego" after Rome reaches out to Anglicans

BabyBlueOnline: Canterbury left in an "awkward position" with a "sore ego" after Rome reaches out to Anglicans

Posted using ShareThis

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Computer Problems

Experiencing some computer problems, so postings will be less frequent during the next week or so.

But the reading and prayer goes forward.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Council of Orange (529), Calvin, Anselm, Bradwardine, Wycliffe, English Reformers, XXXIX Articles

THE COUNCIL OF ORANGE , 529

The Council of Orange was an outgrowth of the controversy between Augustine and Pelagius. This controversy had to do with degree to which a human being is responsible for his or her own salvation, and the role of the grace of God in bringing about salvation. The Pelagians held that human beings are born in a state of innocence, i.e., that there is no such thing as a sinful nature or original sin. As a result of this view, they held that a state of sinless perfection was achievable in this life.

The Council of Orange dealt with the Semi-Pelagian doctrine that the human race, though fallen and possessed of a sinful nature, is still "good" enough to able to lay hold of the grace of God through an act of unredeemed human will.

As you read the Canons of the Council of Orange, you will be able to see where John Calvin derived his views of the total depravity of the human race. THE CANONS OF THE COUNCIL OF ORANGE (529 AD)

CANON 1.

If anyone denies that it is the whole man, that is, both body and soul, that was "changed for the worse" through the offense of Adam's sin, but believes that the freedom of the soul remains unimpaired and that only the body is subject to corruption, he is deceived by the error of Pelagius and contradicts the scripture which says, "The soul that sins shall die" (Ezek. 18:20); and, "Do you not know that if you yield yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are the slaves of the one whom you obey?" (Rom. 6:126); and, "For whatever overcomes a man, to that he is enslaved" (2 Pet. 2:19).

CANON 2.

If anyone asserts that Adam's sin affected him alone and not his descendants also, or at least if he declares that it is only the death of the body which is the punishment for sin, and not also that sin, which is the death of the soul, passed through one man to the whole human race, he does injustice to God and contradicts the Apostle, who says, "Therefore as sin came into the world through one man and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all men sinned" (Rom. 5:12).

CANON 3.

If anyone says that the grace of God can be conferred as a result of human prayer, but that it is not grace itself which makes us pray to God, he contradicts the prophet Isaiah, or the Apostle who says the same thing, "I have been found by those who did not seek me; I have shown myself to those who did not ask for me" (Rom 10:20, quoting Isa. 65:1).

CANON 4.

If anyone maintains that God awaits our will to be cleansed from sin, but does not confess that even our will to be cleansed comes to us through the infusion and working of the Holy Spirit, he resists the Holy Spirit himself who says through Solomon, "The will is prepared by the Lord" (Prov. 8:35, LXX), and the salutary word of the Apostle, "For God is at work in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure" (Phil. 2:13).

CANON 5.

If anyone says that not only the increase of faith but also its beginning and the very desire for faith, by which we believe in Him who justifies the ungodly and comes to the regeneration of holy baptism - if anyone says that this belongs to us by nature and not by a gift of grace, that is, by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit amending our will and turning it from unbelief to faith and from godlessness to godliness, it is proof that he is opposed to the teaching of the Apostles, for blessed Paul says, "And I am sure that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ" (Phil. 1:6). And again, "For by grace you have been saved through faith; and this is not your own doing, it is the gift of God" (Eph. 2:8). For those who state that the faith by which we believe in God is natural make all who are separated from the Church of Christ by definition in some measure believers.

CANON 6.

If anyone says that God has mercy upon us when, apart from his grace, we believe, will, desire, strive, labor, pray, watch, study, seek, ask, or knock, but does not confess that it is by the infusion and inspiration of the Holy Spirit within us that we have the faith, the will, or the strength to do all these things as we ought; or if anyone makes the assistance of grace depend on the humility or obedience of man and does not agree that it is a gift of grace itself that we are obedient and humble, he contradicts the Apostle who says, "What have you that you did not receive?" (1 Cor. 4:7), and, "But by the grace of God I am what I am" (1 Cor. 15:10).

CANON 7.

If anyone affirms that we can form any right opinion or make any right choice which relates to the salvation of eternal life, as is expedient for us, or that we can be saved, that is, assent to the preaching of the gospel through our natural powers without the illumination and inspiration of the Holy Spirit, who makes all men gladly assent to and believe in the truth, he is led astray by a heretical spirit, and does not understand the voice of God who says in the Gospel, "For apart from me you can do nothing" (John 15:5), and the word of the Apostle, "Not that we are competent of ourselves to claim anything as coming from us; our competence is from God" (2 Cor. 3:5).

CANON 8.

If anyone maintains that some are able to come to the grace of baptism by mercy but others through free will, which has manifestly been corrupted in all those who have been born after the transgression of the first man, it is proof that he has no place in the true faith. For he denies that the free will of all men has been weakened through the sin of the first man, or at least holds that it has been affected in such a way that they have still the ability to seek the mystery of eternal salvation by themselves without the revelation of God. The Lord himself shows how contradictory this is by declaring that no one is able to come to him "unless the Father who sent me draws him" (John 6:44), as he also says to Peter, "Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jona! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven" (Matt. 16:17), and as the Apostle says, "No one can say 'Jesus is Lord' except by the Holy Spirit" (1 Cor. 12:3).

CANON 9.

Concerning the succor of God. It is a mark of divine favor when we are of a right purpose and keep our feet from hypocrisy and unrighteousness; for as often as we do good, God is at work in us and with us, in order that we may do so.

CANON 10.

Concerning the succor of God. The succor of God is to be ever sought by the regenerate and converted also, so that they may be able to come to a successful end or persevere in good works.

CANON 11. Concerning the duty to pray. None would make any true prayer to the Lord had he not received from him the object of his prayer, as it is written, "Of thy own have we given thee" (1 Chron. 29:14).

CANON 12.

Of what sort we are whom God loves. God loves us for what we shall be by his gift, and not by our own deserving.

CANON 13. Concerning the restoration of free will. The freedom of will that was destroyed in the first man can be restored only by the grace of baptism, for what is lost can be returned only by the one who was able to give it. Hence the Truth itself declares: "So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:36).

CANON 14.

No mean wretch is freed from his sorrowful state, however great it may be, save the one who is anticipated by the mercy of God, as the Psalmist says, "Let thy compassion come speedily to meet us" (Ps. 79:8), and again, "My God in his steadfast love will meet me" (Ps. 59:10).

CANON 15.

Adam was changed, but for the worse, through his own iniquity from what God made him. Through the grace of God the believer is changed, but for the better, from what his iniquity has done for him. The one, therefore, was the change brought about by the first sinner; the other, according to the Psalmist, is the change of the right hand of the Most High (Ps. 77:10).

CANON 16.

No man shall be honored by his seeming attainment, as though it were not a gift, or suppose that he has received it because a missive from without stated it in writing or in speech. For the Apostle speaks thus, "For if justification were through the law, then Christ died to no purpose" (Gal. 2:21); and "When he ascended on high he led a host of captives, and he gave gifts to men" (Eph. 4:8, quoting Ps. 68:18). It is from this source that any man has what he does; but whoever denies that he has it from this source either does not truly have it, or else "even what he has will be taken away" (Matt. 25:29).

CANON 17.

Concerning Christian courage. The courage of the Gentiles is produced by simple greed, but the courage of Christians by the love of God which "has been poured into our hearts" not by freedom of will from our own side but "through the Holy Spirit which has been given to us" (Rom. 5:5).

CANON 18.

That grace is not preceded by merit. Recompense is due to good works if they are performed; but grace, to which we have no claim, precedes them, to enable them to be done.

CANON 19.

That a man can be saved only when God shows mercy. Human nature, even though it remained in that sound state in which it was created, could be no means save itself, without the assistance of the Creator; hence since man cannot safe- guard his salvation without the grace of God, which is a gift, how will he be able to restore what he has lost without the grace of God?

CANON 20.

That a man can do no good without God. God does much that is good in a man that the man does not do; but a man does nothing good for which God is not responsible, so as to let him do it.

CANON 21.

Concerning nature and grace. As the Apostle most truly says to those who would be justified by the law and have fallen from grace, "If justification were through the law, then Christ died to no purpose" (Gal. 2:21), so it is most truly declared to those who imagine that grace, which faith in Christ advocates and lays hold of, is nature: "If justification were through nature, then Christ died to no purpose." Now there was indeed the law, but it did not justify, and there was indeed nature, but it did not justify. Not in vain did Christ therefore die, so that the law might be fulfilled by him who said, "I have come not to abolish them [the law and prophets] but to fulfil them" (Matt. 5:17), and that the nature which had been destroyed by Adam might be restored by him who said that he had come "to seek and to save the lost" (Luke 19:10).

CANON 22.

Concerning those things that belong to man. No man has anything of his own but untruth and sin. But if a man has any truth or righteousness, it from that fountain for which we must thirst in this desert, so that we may be refreshed from it as by drops of water and not faint on the way.

CANON 23.

Concerning the will of God and of man. Men do their own will and not the will of God when they do what displeases him; but when they follow their own will and comply with the will of God, however willingly they do so, yet it is his will by which what they will is both prepared and instructed.

CANON 24.

Concerning the branches of the vine. The branches on the vine do not give life to the vine, but receive life from it; thus the vine is related to its branches in such a way that it supplies them with what they need to live, and does not take this from them. Thus it is to the advantage of the disciples, not Christ, both to have Christ abiding in them and to abide in Christ. For if the vine is cut down another can shoot up from the live root; but one who is cut off from the vine cannot live without the root (John 15:5ff).

CANON 25.

Concerning the love with which we love God. It is wholly a gift of God to love God. He who loves, even though he is not loved, allowed himself to be loved. We are loved, even when we displease him, so that we might have means to please him. For the Spirit, whom we love with the Father and the Son, has poured into our hearts the love of the Father and the Son (Rom. 5:5).

CONCLUSION.

And thus according to the passages of holy scripture quoted above or the interpretations of the ancient Fathers we must, under the blessing of God, preach and believe as follows. The sin of the first man has so impaired and weakened free will that no one thereafter can either love God as he ought or believe in God or do good for God's sake, unless the grace of divine mercy has preceded him. We therefore believe that the glorious faith which was given to Abel the righteous, and Noah, and Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and to all the saints of old, and which the Apostle Paul [sic] commends in extolling them (Heb. 11), was not given through natural goodness as it was before to Adam, but was bestowed by the grace of God. And we know and also believe that even after the coming of our Lord this grace is not to be found in the free will of all who desire to be baptized, but is bestowed by the kindness of Christ, as has already been frequently stated and as the Apostle Paul declares, "For it has been granted to you that for the sake of Christ you should not only believe in him but also suffer for his sake" (Phil. 1:29). And again, "He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ" (Phil. 1:6). And again, "For by grace you have been saved through faith; and it is not your own doing, it is the gift of God" (Eph. 2:8). And as the Apostle says of himself, "I have obtained mercy to be faithful" (1 Cor. 7:25, cf. 1 Tim. 1:13). He did not say, "because I was faithful," but "to be faithful." And again, "What have you that you did not receive?" (1 Cor. 4:7). And again, "Every good endowment and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights" (Jas. 1:17). And again, "No one can receive anything except what is given him from heaven" (John 3:27). There are innumerable passages of holy scripture which can be quoted to prove the case for grace, but they have been omitted for the sake of brevity, because further examples will not really be of use where few are deemed sufficient. According to the catholic faith we also believe that after grace has been received through baptism, all baptized persons have the ability and responsibility, if they desire to labor faithfully, to perform with the aid and cooperation of Christ what is of essential importance in regard to the salvation of their soul. We not only do not believe that any are foreordained to evil by the power of God, but even state with utter abhorrence that if there are those who want to believe so evil a thing, they are anathema. We also believe and confess to our benefit that in every good work it is not we who take the initiative and are then assisted through the mercy of God, but God himself first inspires in us both faith in him and love for him without any previous good works of our own that deserve reward, so that we may both faithfully seek the sacrament of baptism, and after baptism be able by his help to do what is pleasing to him. We must therefore most evidently believe that the praiseworthy faith of the thief whom the Lord called to his home in paradise, and of Cornelius the centurion, to whom the angel of the Lord was sent, and of Zacchaeus, who was worthy to receive the Lord himself, was not a natural endowment but a gift of God's kindness.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

De Regnis Duobus: Cult, Culture, and the Christian's Dual Citizenship: Preliminary Hearing Before the Standing Judicial Commission of the PCA

De Regnis Duobus: Cult, Culture, and the Christian's Dual Citizenship: Preliminary Hearing Before the Standing Judicial Commission of the PCA

Posted using ShareThis

An important meeting before the Standing Judicial Committee (SJC) of the PCA. To be held tomorrow.

Rev. Spellman and two others have filed a complaint against their presbytery to an higher level, the SJC. Subject: the Pacific Northwest Presbytery has failed to take substantive action re: a Federal Visionist pastor, Rev. Peter K. Leithart.

The General Assembly of the PCA last week condemned FV as out of accord with the Westminster Standards.

We'll be following this important case.

onetimothyfour: Repenting of the Reformation – a sermon by Stanley Hauerwas

onetimothyfour: Repenting of the Reformation – a sermon by Stanley Hauerwas

Posted using ShareThis

Exactly what you'd expect from a Romanist inside the Anglican Church.

Calvin on Psalm Singing in Worship « Heidelblog

Calvin on Psalm Singing in Worship « Heidelblog

Posted using ShareThis

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Sola Scriptura: Hillary of Poitiers

Posted by Martin Downes at http://against-heresies.blogspot.com/2009/11/thus-every-whisper-of-blasphemy-is.html

"Thus every whisper of blasphemy is silenced": Hilary of Poitiers

Here are some great words from Hilary of Poitiers (d. 367) found in Book One of his work On the Trinity:

For he is the best student who does not read his thoughts into the book, but lets it reveal its own; who draws from it its sense, and does not import his own into it, nor force upon its words a meaning which he had determined was the right one before he opened its pages.

Since then we are to discourse of the things of God, let us assume that God has full knowledge of Himself, and bow with humble reverence to His words. For He Whom we can only know through His own utterances is the fitting witness concerning Himself.At the close of Book One, Hilary offers the following prayer:

"I know, O Lord God Almighty, that I owe Thee, as the chief duty of my life, the devotion of all my words and thoughts to Thyself. The gift of speech which Thou hast bestowed can bring me no higher reward than the opportunity of service in preaching Thee and displaying Thee as Thou art, as Father and Father of God the Only-begotten, to the world in its blindness and the heretic in his rebellion.

"But this is the mere expression of my own desire; I must pray also for the gift of Thy help and compassion, that the breath of Thy Spirit may fill the sails of faith and confession which I have spread, and a favouring wind be sent to forward me on my voyage of instruction.

"We can trust the promise of Him Who said, Ask, and it shall be given you, seek, and ye shall find, knock, and it shall be opened unto you and we in our want shall pray for the things we need.

"We shall bring an untiring energy to the study of Thy Prophets and Apostles, and we shall knock for entrance at every gate of hidden knowledge, but it is Thine to answer the prayer, to grant the thing we seek, to open the door on which we beat.

"Our minds are born with dull and clouded vision, our feeble intellect is penned within the barriers of an impassable ignorance concerning things Divine; but the study of Thy revelation elevates our soul to the comprehension of sacred truth, and submission to the faith is the path to a certainty beyond the reach of unassisted reason.

"And therefore we look to Thy support for the first trembling steps of this undertaking, to Thy aid that it may gain strength and prosper. We look to Thee to give us the fellowship of that Spirit Who guided the Prophets and the Apostles, that we may take their words in the sense in which they spoke and assign its right shade of meaning to every utterance.

"For we shall speak of things which they preached in a mystery; of Thee, O God Eternal, Father of the Eternal and Only-begotten God, Who alone art without birth, and of the One Lord Jesus Christ, born of Thee from everlasting. We may not sever Him from Thee, or make Him one of a plurality of Gods, on any plea of difference of nature.

We may not say that He is not begotten of Thee, because Thou art One. We must not fail to confess Him as true God, seeing that He is born of Thee, true God, His Father. Grant us, therefore, precision of language, soundness of argument, grace of style, loyalty to truth.

Enable us to utter the things that we believe, that so we may confess, as Prophets and Apostles have taught us, Thee, One God our Father, and One Lord Jesus Christ, and put to silence the gainsaying of heretics, proclaiming Thee as God, yet not solitary, and Him as God, in no unreal sense.

Irish Reformed Churchman: ABP James Ussher (1580-1656)


Part two beginneth.

The Whole Works of the Most Rev. James Ussher, D.D., Lord Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of All Ireland (London: Whittaker and Co., 1847).
Calvinistic divines with a Prayer Book really existed, once upon a time. He knew the idiot of Canterbury, William Laud.

Observations:
1. James VI of Scotland doubted he would succeed Elizabeth to the throne.

2. James IV sends two emissaries in 1585 to Dublin, James Fullerton and James Hamilton, to maintain correspondence with the Protestant nobility. They opened a school. Hence, Calvinistic theology in Ireland. Fullerton had been a. student of Andrew Melville of Glasgow. Both Fullerton and Hamilton may have been class fellows of Melville’s at St. Andrews in 1558. All three names appear on the list of admission. Age issues are discussed in this introduction as well as the interactions of these Scots Reformers.

3. To this school, James Ussher was sent at the age of eight. 1588, the same year as the Spanish assault against England. Ussher continued at the school for five years. Ussher is a third generation Calvinistic or Reformed Anglican.

4. January 1593-94, Trinity College, University of Dublin was erected. Ussher’s family was instrumental in the establishment of the College. His Grandfather, Stanihurst, made the motion for such in Parliament. His uncle, Henry Ussher, Archdeacon of Dublin, later Archbishop of Armagh, went to England twice to negotiate the matter. In 1591, Henry returned with letters of approval by Exegete the First.

5. Page, 18, footnote 5, is instructive re: the course of training in logic, rhetoric, grammar, math and classical literature. Also, instruction in Greek, Latin, Hebrew and Syriac. Also, the use of the finest systematic theology written and used as the basis of lectures—Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion. The importance of this latter point cannot be underestimated---it reflects the state of things in England also.

6. Ussher will be the man who marshals the Irish Articles of 1615 into force for the Church of Ireland. These Articles are taken over, by and large, into the English expansion of needed revision of the XXXIX Articles. The Calviniphobes of modern Anglicanism and hyper-allergic AC/TRACTO’s need a re-introduction to the grand Master, the French sovereign in skill and attainment…over the English Reformers.

7. Ussher’s name remains to this day as the “very first enrollee” in Trinity College.
8. In addition to language studies, he became an avid reader in theology.

9. Ussher vowed to read “everything” in the Church Fathers. Age 20. Completed when age 38. Ergo, started in 1600 and completed in 1618.

10. He obtained the BA in 1597.

11. 1600, MA. Ussher was appointed as the “Catechetist to the College” and first Proctor of the College.

Correlations:

1. Travers in London. Timeline and arrival in Ireland. Relations with Whitgift. Laud's name will appear in later correspondence with Ussher.

2. Comparison to other baccalaureate programs, e.g. Cambridge, Oxford.

3. Comparison to non-classical backgrounds of current seminary students.

4. The Institutes. Impact on Irish clergy besides Ussher. The Irish Articles will be ratified by a Convocation of Irish Calvinists with the Prayer Book.

Interpretation:

The Reformation was led by upon well-trained men and, yet, Ussher’s works are largely ignored by Anglican leaders. If you listen to modern Anglicans, you'd think the Reformation was over. In fact, we heard tell of one influential "evangelical Calvinist" in the ACNA--this week--who said that; what's he been smokin'? That proposition by this "influential evanglical Calvinist" could be destroyed in a nano-second if pushed. Dumb statement by a dumb churchman, more political than theological. (Sola stupida.) People still vote for idiots as Bishops. So glad to be retired, owned by no one, serving as a simple lay person (though still ordained), and not influenced by sola getta accepta by'a da'a crowd. Tremendous freedom to call it like we see it. And laugh too.

Application:

1. “Maintain course and bearing.” No one else is talking about Calvinistic Anglicans.
2. Support Calvinists, even though most have no Prayer Book piety. Beata pazienzia.

7-Why I Use the Book of Common Prayer

7- The text is immediately below. Below that are my own observations, correlation, interpretation, and applications. Why I use the 1662 Book of Common Prayer for daily and evening Prayers?

Real men kneel in heart, mind and body in prayer. These low views of God and this sitting-stuff has to go!! Sitting on the bottoms must go!! My Marines soon learned and soon were doing as these men on the right did and do--often!!
----------------
Kneeling:
Priest. O God, make speed to save us. Answer. O Lord, make haste to help us.

Here all standing up, the Priest shall say,

Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; Answer. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.
Priest. Praise ye the Lord. Answer. The Lord's Name be praised.
-------------------

Observations:


1. Scriptural verses on sin, Exhortation to Confession of Sin, Confession of Sin, Declaration of Absolution, and the Lord’s Prayer precedes these versicles and Doxology. Following these versicles and Doxology comes the saying or singing of Psalm 95 (the Prayer Book is full of Psalms…more than enough to make the head spin for a Psalm-singing Covenanter). See our earlier posts on “Why I Use the Book of Common Prayer 1-6.”

2. Here is the spirit of importunity. “Priest. O God, make speed to save us. Answer. O Lord, make haste to help us.”
We’ve already addressed the “priest” question. An appropriate rubric needs to be added, to wit, that this is a vocational and lawfully called priest serving among fellow priests, the laity.

3. The entire Psalter breathes this spirit of importunity. This is why the recovery of singing the Psalms is an important corollary to Prayer Book piety. If Prayer Book piety is anything, it is supplicatory and reflects utter reliance upon God for support. It is Augustinian throughout, not synergistic Greek Orthodoxy.

4. Psalm 31.2 is representative of the versicles: “Bow down your ear to me, deliver me speedily; be my rock of refuge, a mighty fortress to save me.” The sense is deliver me quickly, promptly, and at the appointed time. There is "no commanding" of God as is seen in the "Pentecostal Word of Faith" movements.
5. This spirit is infrequently manifested in non-Reformed liturgies in the Protestant world. In fact, it is lessened in the Reformed liturgies. We are Prayer Book Anglicans here. We are unfamiliar with Lutheran liturgies but we do expect a similar ethos; they weren’t Radical Reformers and they weren't enthusiasts. We fear that some of the Puritans were forerunners of enthusiasts. Baptists have no liturgy and no connection to historical worship.

6. The sense of the word “to save” us is widely understood including many things as well as justification, adoption, sanctification, and preservation therein. Evangelically and evangelistically, it is highly appropriate for the confession of sin and the “calling on the name of the LORD.” This evangelistic perspective needs to be pointed out. Also, it is highly appropriate for the justified saint for the prayer for strength and persevering faith.
7. The people move from kneeling—appropriate to prayer—to standing and giving praise.
8. The versicle of petition is met by the Trinitarian Doxology sometimes called the Gloria.
“Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; Answer. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.”
This phrase recurs regularly throughout the Prayer Book and is recited after every Psalter lection, like a refrain or coda to an hymn. Disciplined use of the Gloria is a given.

9. The Priest and fellow-priests, or believers, offer the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving:
Priest. Praise ye the Lord. Answer. The Lord's Name be praised.

Interpretation:
In sequence to the praying for the opening of the lips, the petition for divine aid of enablement to worship, the praying priests seek speedy deliverance along with the expression of praise, the Trinitarian Doxology or Gloria.

Applications:

1. It becomes clearer why this scribe cannot tolerate or go near contemporary worship; it is also clear why this scribe cannot abide non-liturgical and often--quite unbiblical--worship services; advise youth to avoid professors, seminaries, elders or deacons that advance this shallowness re: Law and Gospel said to include, but not limited to Rick Warren, general evangelicals and others ; advise them to get into Confessional Churches that are liturgically mature; however, we cannot recommend the American Anglican breed (ACNA); their Prayer Book is as defective as the educations and "confessions" (sola mish masha) of their leaders (sola confusa). Seek a Confessional Reformed congregation where the theology is solid, while tolerating the non-liturgy. Use the Prayer Book privately until any Reformed Anglican works develop.
2. Use the Prayer Book daily until death. As the evangelical Anglican, Charles Simeon, stated (in essence), “I never was or felt closer to heaven than when praying and reading the prayer book.

3. Advocate for the recovery of Psalm-singing rather than hymns in connection with the BCP.

4. No revisions except the standing objection: one rubric to identify the laity as “fellow priests and kings” with the lawfully called and ordained priest. Without the rubric, the mischief continues. Or, adopt the 1552 BCP by Cranmer or the 1873 BCP of the REC that wisely replaced "priest" with "minister." We've identified this objection previously.

Blog 224: 4.17.21 - 4.17.24 - Blogging the Institutes

Blog 224: 4.17.21 - 4.17.24 - Blogging the Institutes

Posted using ShareThis

An excellent post on the "is" of hoc est corpus meum from the Master.

Poll Update: 18 November 2009


Duncan thinks the ACNA should be Calvinistic?

3 “yes.” 8 “no.” About 37% to 73%. It is difficult with short questions to provide adequate definitions. We think as Dordtian Calvinists, as most Calvinists in the Reformed world do. The Amyraldian view of Calvinism, e.g. Sydney, is not Calvinism Confessionally defined. We think that Bob of Pittsburg believes in sola ad mixta and that Calvinism and Greek Orthodoxy are compatible. The Greeks disagree; their Confessional documents call Calvinism "abominable, impious and blasphemous." Or, Bob's view that Calvinism and Anglo-Catholicism are compatible. Or, again, that everybody should play go alonga and sola confusa. Calvinism, from what we’ve seen, is a sola non issua. The ACNA is a "half-baked" cake. The "half-baked" is a justifiable sobriquiet.

Duncan became a Calvinist during seminary days at General Seminary, NY?

1 “yes.” 7 “no.” 13% to 87%. We don’t have Bob’s transcript, but we’ll say this. Bob may have escaped the rampant liberalism of biblical vandalism while at General. The place is notoriously liberal. What solid Churchman would spent three cents or three years there? This itself testifies to the uter weakness of his pre-seminary days---then three years in a biblical ghetto of liberal Episcopalianism. We still have no doctrinal statements or developments from Bob or his associates re: liberal views of Scripture. His view of women’s ordination is a symptom of his deeper difficulties, e.g. sola cultura et sola moderna. Bob didn’t go to a good seminary. Who really knows what Bob believes, let alone Calvinism.Italic We feel fairly confident that Bob did NOT-repeat, did NOT--become a Calvinist at General. The "yes" voter is "out to lunch" on the question.
One does not go to General Seminary to become a Reformed or Calvinist Anglican.

Duncan believes predestination and that only the elect are the intended recipients of redemption?

2 “yes.” 4 “no.” 3 “who knows?” 22% said “yes.” Not a trick question, but we assumed “unconditional election,” something abhorrent to Anglo-Catholics and their Orthodox friends. About 65% said “no” or “who knows.” A large problem has emerged. Sola nighta and sola confusa. Given our own darkness about Bob's theology, any answer could apply. The "who knows?" voters are probably the most correct.

Duncan hopes Calvinists will not be too loud about it?

6 “yes.” 4 “no.” 60% to 40%. Either way, Bob doesn’t have to worry. The Calvinists believe in ad mixta, ad confusa, sola cultura, doctrinal go alonga and sola enthusiastica. He can look straight at the sola capitula of every bishop in the Reformed Episcopal Church, as well as AMiA Churchmen. Whatever Rev. (bp.) Roger's leanings once were, we hear no "principled statements" from him on Reformed Theology. Having known the REC bishops, no possible trust can exist for those who know them---NONE. Sola needa accepta by'a others. Will sell theology for it too.
The 40% voters are sensitive on the question. English Reformers were Calvinist. The 40%-ers hope Calvinism does NOT become an issue. No need to worry. Principled, biblical, theological and historical exegesis will not govern the discussions.

Romans 3.9: Why I am not Roman, Orthodox, or Evangelical Arminian

Romans 3.9

9 What then? Are we Jews any better off? No, not at all. For we have already charged that all, both Jews and Greeks, are under sin,

9 τι ουν προεχομεθα ου παντως προητιασαμεθα γαρ ιουδαιους τε και ελληνας παντας υφ αμαρτιαν ειναι
Observations:

Observations:

1. Verse 9. “To return to the discussion,” following Romans 3.1-8 and the casuistic questions about God’s faithfulness, truthfulness, and justice. What should be said? Are Jews superior? Or are Gentiles? There’s nothing to choose here since both were equally indicted, the Gentiles (Romans 1.18-32) and the Jews (Romans 2.17-29). Both ethnic and all linguistic groups are under sin.

2. Whether Jew or Gentile regarding privileges, one over the other in either direction, such is answered by a “sweeping denial. (Murray, 102). Paul answers: “No, not at all.” The sense of the answer is: “not by any means,” “in no respect,” or “altogether not.”

3. Irrespective of birth or privilege, e.g. the Hebrew exposure and possession of the “oracles of God” (Romans 3.1), all--without exception or exemption, are “under sin.” παντας υφ αμαρτιαν ειναι

4. Romans 3.9-20, if we may, is the closing argument of the universal indictment of Romans 1.18-2.24. The gavel has dropped. "All are under sin."

5. The series of statements drawn from the Old Testament are decisive for Paul. There are no rabbis, apocryphal literature or self-statements. The Scripture triumphantly concludes the case.

6. This section deals with sin, loss of communion with God, the fugitive impulse in the fallen human, the alienation of affections, the twistedness of fallen reason in theological matters, inherent opposition to God and His kingdom, and the specifics of sin’s venomous anti-God character, its internal and external nature.

7. This will raise the question of the origin of sin: confer Romans 5.12ff., inter alia. To be discussed later.

8. Murray powerfully summarizes it this way: “To be `under sin’ is to be under the dominion of sin, and the pervasiveness of the resulting perversity is demonstrated in the manifold ways in which it is manifested. The apostle has selected a series of indictments drawn from the Old Testament and covering the wide range of human character and activity to show that, from whatever aspect men may be viewed, the verdict of Scripture is one of universal and total depravity. The quotation of verses 10-18 is not deprived from any one place in the Old Testament. The apostle places together various passages which when thus combined provide a unified summary of the witness of the Old Testament to the pervasive sinfulness of mankind.”

Correlations (larger considerations and relationships):

1. The classic religions contained a general view that the gods are offended and must be propitiated some way. Humans are hard-wired for his.

2. Contemporaries still think—often—that entrance into Christ’s kingdom is works-based, self-propitiation perhaps with layers of Christian theology. “God judges the heart.” Contemporary evangelicalism has no sensitivities about Law and Gospel.

3. Psalm 143.2; Prov.20.9; Ecc.7.20; Gal.3.22; James 3.2; 1 John 1.8,10 are a few among many texts on the universality of the fall and its effects.

4. Sin is not the result of imitating bad examples: Psalm 51.5; Job.14.4; Jn.3.6.

5. Federal theology re: imputed guilt and inherited corruption.

6. Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen, Origen, Chrysostom, Augustine, Pelagius, Hugo St.
Victor, Peter the Lombard, Anselm, Bonaventura, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Socinus, Arminius, Reformation Confessions and liturgies, Barth and Brunner.

7. Arminians and man’s inherited inability and hence, guiltlessness. "God can't judge someone for something he or she is unable to perform," the operational assumption in Arminianism and Orthodoxy. Arminians and a “gracious ability” based on common grace, enabling them to turn to God.

8. Jonathan Edwards on the “natural ability” versus the “moral inability.” Freedom of the Will, 1741. How this corrupted New England Calvinism with the New Haven theology.

9. Martin Luther’s Bondage of the Will, 1525.

10. Immaculate Conception and the Romish doctrine.

11. Trent, 6th Session, Canon 1: “…although in the free will by no means extinct, though its powers were weakened and bowed down.” In other words, though the will is injured, corrupted and defiled, yet it is not wholly lost, destroyed or annihilated. (Chemnitz, 1.413)

12. Greek patriarch, Cyril Lucar, 1631. Schaff’s Creeds, 1.57ff. Cyril, later repudiated by the Orthodox, believes: “…the freedom of the will before regeneration is denied. (Ch. XIV).” Pisteuomen en tois ouk anagennhqeisai to autexousion nekron einai. Cyril's views on the effect of the fall is summarized by Schaff: “This is in direct opposition to the traditional Greek doctrine which emphasizes liberium arbitrium even more than the Roman, and was never affected by the Augustinian anthropology.”

13. Arminius is straight from the play book of Orthodoxy: “God has from eternity predestined to glory those who would, in his foreknowledge, make good use of their free will in accepting the salvation, and condemned those who would reject it. The Calvinistic doctrine of unconditional predestination is condemned as abominable, impious, and blasphemous.” Confessio Dosithei, Schaff, op.cit., I.63. We understand that anti-Reformation man, Metropolitan Jonah, with his fooled appearance at the ACNA hugfest, 23 Jun 2009, tolerated by the duplicitous, cowardly, and un-Reformed in American Anglican leadership.

14. Romanism: “Although it is proper to each individual, original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam’s descendants. It is a deprivation of original holiness and justice, but human nature has not been totally corrupted.” Catholic Catechism, 405. (Misnamed: it should be called the Romanist Catechism since the Catholic Churches of the Reformation own the title. Another usurpation by them.) Paul will take a different view than the Papists.

Interpretation:

1. Paul presents total depravity of all humans. They “under sin” and the dominion of sin, with the resulting perversity substantiated by a series of indictments drawn from the Old Testament. These indictments cover the wide range of human character and activity to show that the verdict of Scripture is one of universal and total depravity. For St. Paul, what the "Word " says is what "God says."

Applications:

1. Continue to expose the lies of Rome, Orthodoxy, and contemporary evangelicalism (non-Reformed, Arminian).

2. Expose the weaknesses of the Reformed facilitators who are soft on the proud Wesley brothers.

3. Expose the sola duplicita, non solas, sola admixta, sola confusa, and sola stupida of the ACNA and its facilitators. The leaders know what they are doing; the poor sheep don’t know and perhaps don’t care. Caveat emptor.

Calvin's Institutes. 4.7.18: Rome's Imperial Lusts

Calvin’s Institutes, IV.7. 7.17-18: “Rome’s jurisdiction through relations with the usurpers Phocas and Pepin, and thereafter established to the injury of the church”

IV.4.7.18: The Decay of the Church until the Time of Bernard of Clairvaux”

Observations:

1. Calvin provides two quotes from Bernard of Clairveaux (1090-1153) that correctly illustrate the ambition, indiscipline and decadence of the church.

2. Bernard concerning corruptions: “Few pay attention to the mouth of the lawgiver; all, to his hands. And not without reason! For those hands do all the pope’s business. What thing is that, that those who say to you, `Well done, well done,’ are brought from the spoils of the churches? The life of the poor is sown in the streets of the rich; silver glitters in the mud; men rush to it from all sides; not the poorer man but the stronger carries it off, or perhaps he who runs more swiftly. Yet this morality—or rather, this mortality—comes not from you. Would that it might end in you! Amid these things you perform your pastoral duties, surrounded by much and costly array. If I dare say it, these are pastures of devils rather than of sheep. Of course, Peter made a a practice of this: Paul played at this! Your court is accustomed to receive goods rather than make men good. For evil men do not profit there; but good men fail there.”

3. Bernard concerning the unbridled covetousness of Rome in is lusts for power and imperious impulse at usurping jurisdictions: “I voice the murmur and common complaint of the churches. They cry out that they are mangled and dismembered. There are either none or few churches that do not lament or fear these cruel blows. You ask what blows? Abbots are pulled away from the bishops; bishops from their archbishops, etc. Strange, in deed, if this can be excused! By behaving in this way you prove that you have fullness of power, but not of righteousness. This you do because you can, but the question whether you also ought. You have been appointed to preserve for each his honor and rank, not to covet them.”[1]

4. Calvin’s summarization: “We accordingly see the character and prodigious extent of Rome’s profanation of all things sacred, and the dissolution o the whole church order in Bernard’s day. He complains that there converge upon Rome from the whole earth the ambitious, the greedy, the simoniacs, the sacrilegious, the keepers of concubines, the incestuous, and all such monsters, to obtain or retain churchly honors by apostolic authority; and the fraud, deception, and violence have prevailed.”

5. Calvin has cited two quotes from Bernard, although he notes that other quotes abound.

Correlations:

1. Hildebrandian developments before Bernard.

2. Papacy from Charlemagne to Hildedbrand.

Interpretation:
1. Calvin asserts that the Papacy grew through wicked and dirty hands; further, that Bernard correctly expounded the pride, ambition, and unrighteousness of the bishop of Rome. Godly theology and discipline were not to be had.
Application:
1. Search and destroy the "romanticism" with "Romishness," "anti-Confessionalism," and "Anti-Reformationism" amongst the AC/TRACTO's.
2. Expose the prinicples of sola stupida and sola getta alonga.


[1] Bernard, De consideratione I.iv.5; x.13; IV.ii .4,5; III.ii.6-12; III.iv.14.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Calvin's Institutes. 4.7.17: Romanism a Political Construct

Calvin’s Institutes, IV.7. 7.17-18: “Rome’s jurisdiction through relations with the usurpers Phocas and Pepin, and thereafter established to the injury of the church”

IV.4.7.17: The eventual establishment of the papal supremacy

Observations:

1. Calvin mentions Phocas granted to Boniface 111 what Gregory 1 had never sought, to wit, that Rome should be the head of all the churches. What Gregory denied, Boniface 111 affirmed.

2. Gaul reverenced Rome but “only insofar as it pleased.”

3. After Pepin took the kingdom, Rome was “reduced to subjection.”

4. Zacharias, bp. of Rome, helped Pepin (714-768). Zacharias was hard-pressed by the Lombards.

5. Pepin was the King of the Franks (751-768) and the father of Charlemagne. The reward was Rome’s “jurisdiction over the churches of Gaul.”

6. Here’s Calvin’s summary of the Zacharias-Pepin deal: “As robbers are accustomed to divide up the common spoil, so these good gentlemen arranged between themselves that Pepin should be allowed the earthly and civil lordship after the true king had been deprived, while Zacharias should become the head of all the bishops and hold spiritual power.”

7. The pope’s authority thereafter was weak. However, this authority was strengthened with Charlemagne “for almost the same reason: he also was behold to the Roman pontiff because he came to the imperial rank by the Pope’s efforts.”

8. Calvin refers to extant notes in the Court of Paris for substantiation of this new era of Papal temporal power, something distinct from the period of Gregory 1.

Interpretation:

Petrine Supremacy is a political, not theological construct.