Logical order of God's decrees

The logical order of God's decrees is the study in Calvinist theology of the logical order (in God's mind, before Creation) of the decree to ordain or allow the fall of man in relation to his decree to save some sinners (election) and condemn the others (reprobation). Several opposing positions have been proposed, all of which have names with the Latin root lapsus meaning fall.

Overview

Supralapsarianism (also called antelapsarianism, pre-lapsarian or prelapsarian) is the view that God's decrees of election and reprobation logically preceded the decree of the fall while infralapsarianism (also called postlapsarianism and sublapsarianism) asserts that God's decrees of election and reprobation logically succeeded the decree of the fall.[1] The words can also be used in connection with other topics, e.g. supra- and infralapsarian Christology.[2] The difference between the two views are minute; supralapsarianism, by virtue of its belief that God creates the elect and reprobate, is a suggestion or provides an inference that at some level, God is the author of sin (because He creates sinners to condemnation). Infralapsarianism teaches that all men are sinful by nature (due to The Fall), are thereby condemned through our own sin (freewill), and that God had foreknowledge of whom He would rescue from condemnation. The infralapsarianist view follows Ephesians 1:4-6, "... even as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before Him. In love He predestined us for adoption to Himself as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of His will, to the praise of His glorious grace, with which He has blessed us in the Beloved" (ESV). That is, some are chosen to be elect (foreknowledge) but not created elect.

Many Calvinists reject both lapsarian views for various reasons. Herman Bavinck rejected both because he sees the entire system of God's plan of salvation as organic with each part mutually dependent and determinative, rather than some parts "causing" others.[3] Other Calvinists (and many non-Calvinists) reject the lapsarian views because they perceive any particular ordering of the decrees as unnecessary and presumptive speculation. Critics of lapsarianism often argue that it is impossible to conceive of a temporal process by which God, in eternity, issued decrees, and it is impossible to know the mind of God without direct, scriptural documentation.

Lapsarian views
Supralapsarianism
Antelapsarianism
Pre-lapsarian or prelapsarian
Infralapsarianism
Sublapsarianism
Postlapsarianism
Decree to: Save some and condemn others
Decree to: Create the elect and the reprobate Create human beings
Decree to: Authorize the Fall (by which all deserve to be condemned)
Decree to: Save some from condemnation and leave others condemned
Decree to: Provide salvation only for the elect

History

The first to articulate the supralapsarian view were Theodore Beza[4] and Jerome Zanchius.[5] A few later Calvinists - in particular those influenced by Beza's theology - embraced supralapsarianism. In England Beza's influence was felt at Cambridge, where William Perkins and William Ames held to it, as well as Franciscus Gomarus in the Netherlands. Later, William Twisse wrote two comprehensive books on supralapsarianism, one in Latin entitled Vindiciae Gratiae, Potestatis, Et Providentiae Dei and a shorter but lengthy English work entitled The Riches of God's Love unto the Vessels of Mercy. In the last century, the most recent proponents of supralapsarianism include Abraham Kuyper, Herman Hoeksema, Arthur Pink, Gordon Clark. Historically, it is estimated that less than 5% of all Calvinists have been Supralapsarian.[5] Also according to Loraine Boettner and Curt Daniel, no major Reformed theologian and very few modern Calvinists are supralapsarian.[6] The infralapsarianism view seems to be expressed in the Synod of Dort in 1618. In the Canons of Dort, First Point of Doctrine, Article 7, it states:

Before the foundation of the world, by sheer grace, according to the free good pleasure of his will, [God] chose in Christ to salvation a definite number of particular people out of the entire human race which had fallen by its own fault from its original innocence into sin and ruin.[7]

However the Synod did not reject those who held to a supralapsarian position, as illustrated in the trial held against Johannes Maccovius and his eventual exoneration concerning his views on sin in the divine decree.[8] Other supralapsarians at the Synod included Franciscus Gomarus, William Ames, and Gisbertus Voetius, none of whom took exception to the Canons of Dort.[9]

The difficulty in ascertaining an historical supralapsarian position is that while many supralapsarians may have held similar positions with regard to the ordering of the decree, the actual object and subject of predestination may differ among many. The example of William Twisse may be interesting to many given some of emphases, which may not be as unique to him historically speaking.

Concerning his doctrine of salvation, Twisse was explicitly and staunchly supralapsarian. But anyone who may read his works would be struck by how difficult it is to make him fit into a received definition of supralapsarianism. He held to the classic supralapsarianism dictum: "Quod primum est in intentione, ultimum est in executione...quod ultimum est in executione, primum est in intentione" (that which is first in intention is last in execution...that which is last in execution is first in intention) and stressed these repeatedly in his writings.

A general claim that most supralapsarians would have held to is the following:

The end result or final intention of the divine decree is the manifestation of God's glory particularly through the application of divine mercy upon some and divine justice upon others. God's mercy is shown to some in the both forgiveness of those guilty of imputed and actual sin and the bestowal of eternal life. On the other hand, God's justice is shown in the permitting of those who are guilty of imputed and actual sin to continue on their chosen path and the bestowal of divine judgment for their unrepentant disobedience. As the manifestation of glory through mercy and justice is the final intention, given the dictum, it is the last set of elements to come to pass within history, or last in execution. What is not so clear is how supralapsarians saw the means playing out to this final end.

Infralapsarians regarded the Fall as an occasion for election and reprobation, choosing some out of a fallen mass and passing by others. As one would expect from a supralapsarian, Twisse maintained that the Fall did not occasion election or reprobation. But he also did not believe that the gulf between infra- and supralapsarians was that extensive, thus stating that the differences between the two was “meerely Logicall."[10] Although he did not believe that the Fall occasionsed election and reprobation, he did not maintain that election and reprobation had no regard for the Fall whatsoever.

He cited from Thomas Aquinas repeatedly to the effect that “reprobation includeth the will of God of permitting sin, and of inferring damnation for sin.”[11] Concommitent to this, he claimed that “God neither damnes nor decrees to damne any man, but for sinne and finall perseverance therein”.[12]

It may seem that Twisse was performing double-talk at this point as a supralapsarian, but Twisse himself maintained that “not one of our divines, that I know, doth maintaine that God did ever purpose to inflict damnation, but for sin."[13] What needs to be made clear at this point is that Twisse did not separate the object decreed from how it is that it comes to pass (modus res) and on the flip side, that the one divine decree had several elements each with its own integrity. The decree is unconditional and will be fulfilled accordingly, but fulfillment does not carry the same means in each object within the one decree: differing objects within the decree have differing modes of agency and thus differing modes of fulfillment.

Election and reprobation are within the decree intended for the final end, but the means through which this final end is brought about is not immediately present within the eternal decree itself. This is manifested within history. Reprobation is thus not an ordination to damnation nakedly considered. It is a decree to deny saving grace within time. In such a state, an individual sinner would receive punishment for their sins. The decree does not necessitate them to sin (as choices the creature makes are contingent and belong to them) nor does it directly prevent them from saving faith and repentance. Reprobation is not an act of divine justice, but a decree that divine justice will be given to some createable and fallible persons who in time will be fallen. Election for Twisse, unlike that of the infralapsarians, is itself not an act of grace, but an election for some createable and fallible persons to receive grace leading to saving faith and repentance in while fallen in time. Equally then, election thus was not an act of mercy, as it is with infralapsarians, but a determination that some will receive mercy in time. Election, reprobation, the Fall, mercy, and justice are coordinate elements within the one divine decree. Election and reprobation do not occasion the Fall, nor does the Fall occasion election and reprobation, but they are coordinate elements logically ordered for purpose of manifesting divine glory.

An interesting point to be made regarding Twisse concerning both how supralapsarians have been understood historically and just how consistent Twisse was in relating the decree to the object decreed is that while he was a supralapsarian some have taken some of the things he said to hint at hypothetical universalism, though this may well be a dubious speculation:

For he hath not wished, but ordained, and made it a positive law, that whosoever believeth shall be saved, and herehence it followeth that if all and every one, from the beginning of the World to the end, shall believe in Christ, all and every one of them shall be saved.[14]

Notes

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References

  • Bavinck, Herman, Supralapsarianism and Infralapsarianism, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Boettner, Loraine (1932), "2.11.6", The Reformed Doctrine of Predestination, Philadelphia: Evangelical Press, ISBN 978-0-87552-129-9, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Bray, John (December 1972), "Theodore Beza's Doctrine of Predestination", Church History, Cambridge University Press, 41 (4): 529, ISSN 0009-6407, JSTOR 3163884
  • Christian Reformed Church (1987), Ecumenical Creeds & Confessions, Grand Rapids: Faith Alive Christian Resources, ISBN 978-0-930265-34-2, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Cross, Frank; Livingston, Elizabeth, eds. (2005), "Sublapsarianism", The Oxford Dictionary Of The Christian Church, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3
  • Daniel, Curt (1993), The History and Theology of Calvinism, Dallas: Scholarly Reprints, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Fesko, John (2001), Diversity within the Reformed Tradition: Supra- and Infralapsarianism in Calvin, Dort, and Westminster, Greenville: Reformed Academic Press, ISBN 978-1-884416-49-1, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Goudriaan, Aza; van Lieburg, Fred, eds. (6 December 2010), Revisiting the Synod of Dordt (1618-1619), Leiden: Brill, pp. 217–241, ISBN 978-90-04-18863-1, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Twisse, William (1631), A Discovery of D. Jackson's Vanity, p. 305, OCLC 56362991, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • Twisse, William (1653), The Riches of God's Love Unto the Vessells of Mercy, retrieved 2012-12-07
  • van Driel, Edwin (1 September 2008), Incarnation Anyway: Arguments for Supralapsarian Christology, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-536916-8, retrieved 2012-12-07
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