Monthly Archives: May 2020

More Than Mere Five Points

It is important to note that the five points do not summarize all of Calvinism; that would be a truncated view of the Reformed faith. One of the aims of this book is to show the panoramic grandeur of the Reformed faith’s worldview.

Joel R. Beeke, Living for God’s Glory: An Introduction to Calvinism, Loc. 720.

Aged Discussions

The discussions of church fathers of some of textual differences shows that most of the important differences have been talked about over the last sixteen or seventeen centuries. It also shows that the existence of such differences was never a reason to give up trust in the Scriptures.

https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/how-we-got-the-bible

Living Confessions

The sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Reformed churches produced several families of orthodox confessions that promoted the Calvinist faith and differentiated it from Roman Catholicism and other groups of Protestant churches. The most well-known of these groups of confessions were the Swiss-Hungarian family, represented by the First and Second Helvetic Confessions (1536 and 1566) and the Helvetic Consensus Formula (1675); the Scottish-English family, represented by the Scots Confession (1560), the Thirty-nine Articles (1563), the Westminster Confession of Faith (1647), and the Shorter (1648) and Larger (1648) Catechisms of the Westminster Assembly; and the Dutch-German family, represented by the Three Forms of Unity: the Belgic Confession of Faith (1561), the Heidelberg Catechism (1563), and the Canons of Dort (1618-1619). Of those Reformed confessions, the seven most diligently adhered to by various Reformed denominations today are the Three Forms of Unity, the Second Helvetic Confession, and the Westminster Confession and Catechisms. They can be called “living” doctrinal standards because they are sanctioned officially by numerous twenty-first century Reformed churches. . .

One cannot avoid being amazed at the remarkable unity of Calvinist theology in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Joel R. Beeke, Living for God’s Glory: An Introduction to Calvinism , Loc. 384,498.

Valuable Contribution of Confessions

One of the striking features of early Calvinists was their dedication to making confessional statements. Those Calvinists and subsequent Reformed believers held that confessions have only a provisional character, since they reflect the limited insights of mere men. Their authority is derived and must always be subordinated to Scripture, which possesses intrinsic authority. Nevertheless, they recognized that confessions make a valuable contribution to the church’s primary tasks: worshiping (the doxological task), witnessing (the declarative task), teaching (the didactic task), and defending the faith (the disciplining task). Reformed confessions have been particularly effective in helping the church unitedly declare what it believes, what it is to be, and how it is to be an evangelical testimony to those outside of its fellowship.

Joel E. Beeke, Living for God’s Glory: An Introduction to Calvinism, Loc. 376.

Adoption

Q. 74. What is adoption?

A. Adoption is an act of the free grace of God, in and for his only Son Jesus Christ, whereby all those that are justified are received into the number of his children, have his name put upon them, the Spirit of his Son given to them, are under his fatherly care and dispensations, admitted to all the liberties and privileges of the sons of God, made heirs of all the promises, and fellow-heirs with Christ in glory.

Westminster Larger Catechism

Q. 34. What is adoption?

A. Adoption is an act of God’s free grace, whereby we are received into the number, and have a right to all the privileges, of the sons of God.

Westminster Shorter Catechism

Civil Government: For Good and Justice

God is good. He is a beneficial sovereign. He has established institutions among men for the good of man; and committed their administration to the hands of men. So far as they come up to the standard, these institutions, in their actual operation, exercise a salutary influence over all who subject themselves to their sway and direction. But God is also just — a righteous law-giver. The divine government gives no countenance to sin: it is ever against it. And, hence, the Most High has invested all his institutions with some kind and degree of restraining power; and has given them laws by which they are to be guided in the disciplinary or punitive department of their functions.

James M. Wilson, Civil Government: An Exposition on Romans XIII. 1-7 (Philadelphia: William S. Young, 1853), 69-70.

Death Kiss of Moderate Orthodoxy

Under [J. A.] Turretin’s guidance, the Council of Geneva tellingly ruled that candidates for ordination need not subscribe to the Formula or even to the Canons of Dordt, but only to the Bible and Calvin’s Catechism, in order to facilitate union among the Reformed, Anglican, and Lutheran churches. Though the younger Turretin aimed at an enlightened, moderate orthodoxy that would defeat philosophical challenges to Christianity and unite Protestantism, his efforts actually opened the gates for heterodoxy to enter into the citadel of Calvinism.

Joel R. Beeke, Debated Issues in Sovereign Predestination: Early Lutheran Predestination, Calvinian Reprobation, and Variations in Genevan Lapsarianism, 211.

Reformed Downgrade

The abolition of requirements for subscription to confessional statements in the name of toleration opened the door for apostasy from essential Reformed doctrines. A watershed moment took place in Genevan theology when J. A. Turretin successfully abolished the requirement that candidates for the ministry subscribe to confessional standards; they needed merely to pledge fidelity to the Bible. Such vague commitments could not wall out heresy, heterodoxy, and apostasy.

Joel R. Beeke, Debated Issues in Sovereign Predestination: Early Lutheran Predestination, Calvinian Reprobation, and Variations in Genevan Lapsarianism, 222.

The End of Reformed Orthodoxy in Geneva

As an advocate of natural theology, J. A. Turretin had no interest in the decrees of God. He taught that the doctrine of predestination had only led to “wild excess” in Protestant circles. . . . For J. A. Turretin, the notion of sin and man’s unworthiness of salvation did not bear any implications for the divine decree. His Fundamentals in Religion reveal how completely he had depart from his father’s theology in many cardinal doctrines of Reformed orthodoxy. His fight to abrogate the [Genevan] Formula Consensus of 1675, which he accomplished by 1706, spelled the final defeat for Reformed orthodoxy at Geneva Academy.

Joel R. Beeke, Debated Issues in Sovereign Predestination: Early Lutheran Predestination, Calvinian Reprobation, and Variations in Genevan Lapsarianism, 210.

Decline of Reformed Theology

Around 1750 Reformed theology everywhere fell into decay. The elements responsible for this decomposition, already present in the previous century, continued to have their effect, undermining dogmatics. After Cocceianism in the Netherlands had emerged victorious came the Ear of Toleration (1740–70). The power of truth was denied; people retreated from the church’s confessions to Scripture and abandoned doctrines characteristic for the Reformed faith, such as original sin, the covenant of works, limited atonement, etc. In beautiful dress and the name of being biblical, a variety of Remonstrant and Socinian errors rose to the surface. At best, those who professed the Reformed religion accepted the theology that they had “in stock,” but they no longer had their hearts in it, nor did they any longer speak out of its content. The old dogmatics [simply] became an object of historical study.

Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics: Prolegomena, I:189.