Bavinck on Nature & Grace & What It Means For SAC When Grace Restores Nature

“Bavinck frequently and forcefully underscored that the reformation Christ brought about by his revelation differs fundamentally from revolution. Moses and the prophets, Christ and the apostles ‘discriminated in an inimitable manner between healthy and sick reality.’ Whereas in other religions and philosophical systems ‘these two spheres’ are constantly confused and mixed together, the special revelation that comes to us in Christ,

keeps the two in clear distinction; it acknowledges nature, everywhere and without reservation, but it nevertheless joins battle w/ sin on every front. It seeks reformation of natural life, always and everywhere, but only for the purpose and by the means of liberating it from unrighteousness.

This insight is also determinative for the assessment of concrete events and movements in social and political affairs:

Because the gospel is concerned exclusively w/ liberation from sin, it leaves all natural institutions intact. It is in principle opposed to all socialism, communism and anarchism, since these never oppose only sin, but identify (through the denial of the Fall) sin w/ nature, unrighteousness w/ the very institution of family, state and society, and thus creation w/ the Fall. For the same reason the Gospel is averse to revolution of any kind, which arises out of the principle of unbelief, since such revolution, in its overthrowing of the existing order, makes no distinction between nature and sin, and eradicates the good together w/ the bad. The gospel, by contrast, always proceeds reformationally. The gospel itself brings about the greatest reformation, because it brings liberation from guilt, renews the heart, and thus in principle restores the right relation of man to God.

Jan Veenhof
Nature & Grace in Herman Bavinck — pg. 23-24

1.) What Veenhof is drawing out here from Bavinck is that Grace restores nature because Grace has the effect of removing from nature its participation in sin driven sick reality. Grace never turns nature into grace but the effect of grace upon nature is to restore nature to its healthy reality from the sick reality that sin has it in bondage to.

2.) Nature and Grace remain distinct for Bavinck but Grace has an impact on nature thus indication that Grace is not divorced from nature.

3.) For Bavinck Socialism, Anarchism, and Communism (SAC) had to be opposed by all right minded Christians because SAC are part of the disordered sin sick reality that nature was poisoned with. SAC creates sick reality because they identify sin w/ nature, and creation w/ the fall, and so in order to attack sin and the fall they attack nature and thus seek to pull down God’s institutional created social order that includes family, state, and society, preferring instead a sinful social order where God’s diversity is blended into a humanistic Unitarian sameness. This creates the sick reality that Bavinck speaks of.

4.) Where the Gospel flourishes and brings Reformation (i.e. counter-Revolution) SAC is brought to heel since SAC is the revolutionary antithesis based on the principle of unbelief. From this I would say that we can legitimately conclude that Reformation is being granted where SAC is seen in abysmal retreat. Where SAC isn’t in retreat there is no Reformation.

Social Gospel … Marxist or Christian

http://www.crosswalk.com/news/commentary/11627652/

“Should churches and individual Christians seek to help people with material problems and social needs, remedy social ills, and improve social institutions? Throughout history many congregations, Christian organizations, and individual believers have labored to do these things. Today, however, some political conservatives denounce the “social gospel” as misguided and unbiblical and counsel Christians to avoid or leave congregations that stress social justice.”

First, let us understand that the whole idea of the Social Gospel in its historical instantiation, as exemplified by men like Walter Rauschenbush and Washington Gladden, was an attempt to reinvent the Christian Gospel. The Social Gospel was often derivative of the school of higher criticism which denied the supernatural. Further it often pursued the oxymoronic course of “Christian Socialism.” This should clue us in immediately that the historical movement of the Social Gospel was thoroughly anti-Christ as seen in its attempt to syncretize Biblical Christianity w/ anti-Christian Marxian socialism.

However, having noted that it needs to be immediately be said that it is impossible for any belief system to not have a social aspect. As such the Christian gospel will always have a social side. The problem, historically speaking, is that the Social Gospel yielded the social impact of the Gospel of Marxism and not of the Gospel of Christianity.

There are those today who are reacting violently against any idea that the Gospel has a social side since they believe that the failures of earlier versions of the Social Gospel are proof positive that the Church should just delete the whole idea of its Gospel having a social side. These types would insist that the Gospel is all personal impact and no social effect.

So, if the point of the crosswalk article is that Christians need to embrace once again the “social gospel” in it’s progressive expression of the early 20th century then we would say that the crosswalk article is anathema. However, if the point of the crosswalk article is that the Gospel must have a social impact that is measured by biblical categories we could not help but agree. Unfortunately, as I read the crosswalk article, I am inclined to think that they are appealing to the former.

Crosswalk,

Television talk show host Glenn Beck urges Christians to run away as fast as they can from all churches that use “‘social justice’ or ‘economic justice'” on their websites. Rather than expressing the mission of these churches to reduce poverty and promote human rights, Beck asserts, these terms are simply “code words” for communism and Nazism. Social justice, he claims, is “a perversion of the gospel.”

Again, if we are talking about the historical “Social Gospel” movement we would have to say that Beck is correct. Keep in mind that the “Social Gospel” movement was devoted to pushing the Government to pursue its version of social justice by means of the theft and redistribution of wealth.

Second, there should be no problem in any Church as a Church seeking to raise funds, voluntarily given, to provide relief. The problem with the Social Gospel is when the Church seeks to move the Government to provide relief with monies taken involuntarily.

Crosstalk,

“Kim Moreland, a research associate for Charles Colson’s BreakPoint, argues that adherents of the social gospel believe they can “completely eradicate poverty and other types of social ills” largely by using the political process. Instead of preaching “the good news of the Gospel,” they allegedly argue that laws and government programs can create the good society.

Bret responds,

And such argumentation is the historic expression of the Social Gospel. That two professors from Grove City college would disagree w/ this assessment is indicative that Christians should quit sending their children to Grove City College.

Crosstalk writes,

In “The Shameful Social Gospel” T. A. McMahon, president of The Berean Call ministry, accuses proponents of the social gospel of assuming that Christians can best win people to their faith by alleviating the human suffering produced by poverty, disease, social injustice, and civil rights abuses. The social gospel is “a deadly disease” that reinforces “belief that salvation can be attained by doing good works” and acting morally and sacrificially. Every time Christians have undertaken practical actions to benefit humanity, McMahon contends, they have “compromised biblical faith and dishonored God” because the Bible does not command the “church to fix the problems of the world.”

Bret responds,

The Grove City professors who wrote this article need to answer the reality that the Social Gospel has always had a tendency to make “rice Christians.”

Second, I would have to agree that the Church is not commanded to fix the problems of the world. The Church is not primarily a relief agency, a government, a educational unit, a repository of the arts, a law center, or any number of other things. The Church is primarily the herald of Christ crucified, resurrected and ascended. Certainly what the Church teaches, touches on social subjects but it is the responsibility of individual Christians, having learned Christ in the Church, to extend the crown rights of King Jesus in each of these spheres and so bring the solution of Christ to the world.

That which fixes the problems of the world is the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the discipling which comes in sanctification. Those who are to fix the problems of the world are individual Christians who are applying to all of life what the Church teaches from Scripture. The Church’s only role, beyond teaching, is one of correction when individual Christians posit heinous social theories (Marxism, Keynesianism, Deconstructionism, etc.) under the banner of Christ.

Crosswalk article,

“These commentators and others who censure the church’s social mission misread both history and the Bible. Certainly, some social gospel advocates have ignored evangelism and individual piety, and others have rejected Christian orthodoxy. However, many other Christians have endeavored both to save souls and help the poor and oppressed. They have often argued that these two missions are integrally related. William Wilberforce and other members of the Clapham Sect worked zealously in England in the early 1800s to abolish slavery, make work safer and better compensated, and assist the indigent. At the same time, leaders of the Second Great Awakening created numerous reform societies in America to achieve these same ends and to help other troubled groups. Many of the evangelicals who espoused social Christianity in the years between 1880 and 1920 labored to improve working conditions, management-labor relationships, and patterns of social interaction, renovate slums, reduce crime, abolish child labor, and increase racial justice. While working to win converts and plant churches around the world, thousands of Christian missionaries have also built hospitals and schools and tried to abolish slavery, end social abuses, and create more just societies.”

Bret responds,

Again, the Grove city professors seem confused in this article and part of that confusion stems from the fact that they don’t start w/ an ironclad definition of the Social Gospel. If they are applauding the work of individual Christians to relieve the poor and bring aid to the least of these who could or would ever disagree? However, historically, that has not been the definition of the “Social Gospel.” Historically the Social Gospel has meant Marxism wrapped up as Christianity. Historically the Social Gospel has meant the attempt, by the means of the policing arm of the State, to force redistribution of wealth. If this is what the Grove City college professors are advocating then they advocating Anti-Christ social policy. One must keep in mind that the Social Gospel never works because you simply can not make poor people rich by making rich people poor. All the Social Gospel can do over the long haul is make people equally miserable.

The thing we need to keep in mind here is that the Social Gospel of Biblical Christianity is in antithesis to the Social Gospel of Marxist “Christianity.” The Social Gospel of Biblical Christianity insists on the diminution of the State so that individuals are set free to themselves help the poor. In expressions of Marxist Social Gospel the pursuit of help to the poor, through forced levies of the state upon individuals, ends up hurting the poor since state sanctioned subsidies to the poor end up creating a larger pool of poor people all competing for a restricted number of dollars.

Crosswalk article,

“Second, the Bible clearly commands Christians to care for the sick, feed the hungry, protect the environment, and insure political and social justice. Quoting from Isaiah 61, Jesus summarized His earthly mission as preaching “good news to the poor,” setting prisoners free, helping the blind regain their sight, and liberating the oppressed (Lk. 4:18-19). In the parable of the sheep and goats, He declared that those who feed the hungry, clothe the naked, take in strangers, and visited the sick and imprisoned—”the least of these”—are assisting Him (Mt. 25:31-46).

How can God’s love truly abide in anyone, the apostle John asked, who has substantial possessions and refuses to help the needy? “Let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action,” he adds (I John 3:17-18). Faith without works, James declares, is dead. He exhorts us to show our faith by our acts of compassion and generosity (2:14-18).”

Bret responds,

The Grove City professors keep missing the issue. Yes, individual Christians and even the Church as the Church should look after the “least of these.” But one gets the sense throughout this article that what the Grove City boys are really angling for is the State to take up these responsibilities. If that is what they are angling for we would insist that their Marxist slips are showing. It is not the States job to rob from the “haves” to give to the “have nots” for such a policy only insures a ever burgeoning number of the “have nots,” since subsidies always create more of what is being subsidized (in this case the poor) and since taxes always destroys what is being taxed (in this case the wealthy).

When we pursue a Marxist Social Gospel we are showing our hatred for the needy.

“Crosswalk article,

The Old Testament prophets echoed these themes. Isaiah 58, for example, commands us to “loose the chains of injustice,” “set the oppressed free,” share food with the hungry, and provide shelter and clothing for the poor (vv. 6-7). The Bible mentions justice about 700 times, more than almost any other topic, testifying to God’s passion for justice in the political, social, and economic spheres.”

Bret responds,

Yes, Yes, Yes … everyone agrees with this. The question is though, how is this to be done. Is this to be done through the Marxist Social Gospel or a Evolutionary Capitalism that insures death and destruction for all except the elite party members or is this to be pursued through Biblical Capitalism or some kind of Distributism and Subsidiarity?

Also, one needs to warn here against the incipient idea that the poor are more virtuous than the wealthy just for the reason they are poor. God is not on the side of the wicked poor against the righteous wealthy. Poverty is no sign that God is on your side and wealth is no sign that God is opposed to you.

What many Marxist Social Gospelers need to realize is that many people are poor because their pagan world and life view makes and keeps them poor. What many Marxist Social Gospelers need to realize is that their Social Gospel, where people are taught that they are victims and are encouraged to be envious and where the poor have their resentiment nourished and justified, is perpetuating poverty. The Marxist Social Gospel does nothing to solve the problem of the poor but only exacerbates the problem of poverty

Crosswalk article,

“Identifying the Christian faith with a political platform, program, or party is dangerous. It can distract Christians from their primary calling—to love and serve God in all aspects of our lives and to love our neighbors as we love ourselves—and no one platform, program, or party fully expresses God’s design for earthly life. Churches should refrain from endorsing political candidates or adopting positions on most specific political issues. However, as individuals and members of parachurch groups, Christians can take political stances and lobby for legislation we believe accords with biblical principles. Moreover, we should fight to remedy social ills and end injustices.”

Bret responds,

It is this statement that makes me think that the Grove City professors are advocating a Marxist Social Gospel. A few comments,

1.) I fully agree that no one political party fully expresses God’s design for earthly life. How could that be possible given the fullness of God’s design for earthly life. However, this does not mean that there couldn’t be a political party that Christian could identify with and point to as being “Christian.” All because such a thing doesn’t exist today in these united States doesn’t mean it couldn’t exist. One only has to remember Groen Van Prinister’s and Abraham Kuyper’s “anti-revolutionary” party in the Netherlands.

2.) Churches should always speak to political issues where the Scriptures have explicitly spoken to or have spoken to by necessary deduction. As our culture drifts increasingly away from a Biblical Christian worldview the necessity of the Church to speak on more and more political issues will increase since the political realm will increasingly seek to circumvent the authority of the Church as it pertains to moral issues.

3.) Social ills will best be remedied by the Church preaching Christ and by then discipling those who turn and trust Christ. Social ills are not best remedied by a thought process that holds that if the institutions will be changed then the individuals in the institutions will be changed. Individual conversion must precede institutional change but where individual conversions multiply institutional change will be increasingly pressed. The Marxist Social Gospelers tend to have this backwards, since like all Marxist, they tend to blame societal ills on evil cultural institutions versus a Biblical Social Gospel that blames the evil cultural institutions on individual sin natures that have not been visited w/ conversion.

Crosswalk article,

“In a world filled with social ills—where 27 million people are still enslaved, one-sixth of the population is malnourished, billions suffer from disease, unemployment, illiteracy, and oppression, where war, racism, and sexism are rampant—and where billions do not know Christ, we must stop debating whether the Bible enjoins us to help meet people’s material and physical needs or to focus exclusively on their spiritual needs. Instead, as Jesus did, we must address both types of needs.”

Bret responds,

Notice in the list of the first sentence that “billions who do not know Jesus Christ” comes last. I hold that to be fairly significant. I would have listed it first.

Second, Fifty years of the great society and the war on poverty in these united States has shown us that it does little good to throw money at the relief of people’s physical needs. Money does not solve what is aberrant in the souls of men and women.

Third, we need to prioritize our giving. We need to first take care of the poor who are part of the Household of faith before we take care of the poor who are Christ haters. Concretely, this means looking after the poor in Nigeria who are fighting Muslims and the Christian poor in the Sudan who are also fighting Muslims.

Fourth, I would have dearly loved the Grove City professors to have pointed out where they find the rampant racism and sexism. I don’t see it. However, what I do see is those two categories being favorite Marxist whipping boys used to advance their egalitarian agenda.

Christianity Is The Life Of The Mind

I had a discussion recently w/ some peers on the whole Head, Heart, Hands thing. There was a consensus reached among them that one could start w/ any of the three and end up arriving at all three. I disagreed and disagree. I kept insisting w/ my friends that this is a trichotomy that makes no sense for if we think God’s thoughts after Him (Head) the heart (emotions) & hands (service) will follow like heat and light follow fire. There is no need to pursue Christian emotion (heart) or Christian duty (hands), for when we are thinking God’s thoughts after them these will inescapably follow. If they don’t follow then we aren’t thinking God’s thoughts after Him.

A counter example was raised using the hypothetical person who has a great deal of “head knowledge” but does not serve his fellow man. The solution for this man, it was offered, was that he needed to jump in to some Christian duty. However, can it honestly be said that a person who has “head knowledge” and has either no passion for Christ or service unto Christ really has knowledge? I would contend that our hypothetical person has a desperate need to know Christ if his “knowing” Christ yields no passion or service. The problem of this hypothetical person isn’t that they have “head knowledge” it is that they don’t know Christ, and launching them into some kind of Christian service or urging them to have proper Christian emotions is not going to fix what is wrong with their Christianity.

Thinking Christianly always results in proper affections and rigorous duty. If it doesn’t then one isn’t thinking Christianly. The cure for the person who is stone cold emotionally is not to get them to gin up their emotions. The cure for moribund affections is to know the Christ of the Scriptures. How could anybody be without religious affections who genuinely conversant with their sin and misery and the deliverance they has been granted by Christ? How could anyone not have compassion on people who does not know how much compassion Christ daily has for them? A proper heart disposition is impossible apart from the mind being tutored by Christ, but if the mind is tutored by Christ the heart will always be right. It is not possible to seek Christian emotions apart from the mind for emotions are but the residue of a mind properly oriented. If one has the right mind one will have the right emotions. If one doesn’t think Christianly then it is a guarantee that they will feel pagan(ly).

Christian duty (hands) can not be Christian unless those hands are first instructed by a Christian mind. Lot’s of good works might be done but if those works don’t have the mind of Christ behind them they are just so much chaff. This needs to be articulated repeatedly given the great problem the Church currently has with the Social Gospel. Many people tend to think that if they do good deeds they are Christian. Now, doing good deeds is better than doing bad deeds but good deeds are only genuinely good when they are directed by the mind of Christ.

This idea of majoring on the feelings or the doing absent majoring on thinking rationally is what has led the church to to value the “experiential” and the “emotive” above all else. Currently Christianity is flooded and defined by Pentecostalism and Charismatic-ism. This is a consequence of people not valuing the life of the Christian mind and the result is that the church in the West is irrational, insipid, and irrelevant. Certainly the experiential and the emotive have a important and significant place in the Christian life but the genuine articles will never be reached apart from the a Christian mind that learns Christ by thinking God’s thoughts after Him.

I am reminded of this when I hear of Reformed Churches explicitly teach that the heart is more important than the head and where Pastor’s believe that much of Christian truth is paradox and should be considered “mystery.” I am reminded of this when I constantly hear that “what is important is a right heart and not right doctrine,” as if a heart could ever be right absent of right Christian doctrine. I am reminded of this when it seems that the people who have the most difficult time finding a Church home are people who are interested in prioritizing the life of the mind.

The church is in desperate need of being sanctified and set apart unto Christ. This will never happen if the Church doesn’t once again return to the life of the mind. Not the life of the mind that leaves people cold and sterile in their faith but the life of the mind that floods them with Christian affections and emotions and gives them a mad desire and zeal to do all that they do to the glory of God.

If we horizontalize this and put in terms of human relationships it certainly is the case that I don’t approach my wife the way a Scientist approaches the object under his microscope but neither do I expect to increasingly love my wife unless I increasingly know my wife. Fitting emotions for my wife and duty towards my wife are dependent upon me knowing her better and better.

In the end the head must be right for the head is the engine that pulls the cars of emotion and duty. Orthodoxy ALWAYS leads to orthopraxy. Where it doesn’t the problem is the absence of orthodoxy. One can only fix the absence of orthopraxy by the re-establishing of orthodoxy.

Scripture teaches that this is eternal life “to KNOW God, the only true God and Jesus Christ who thou has sent.”

Scripture teaches,

This is what the LORD says:
“Let not the wise man boast of his wisdom
or the strong man boast of his strength
or the rich man boast of his riches,

24 but let him who boasts boast about this:
that he understands and knows me,

Scripture admonishes us to have this mind in us that was in Christ Jesus. Scripture teaches that we are to be transformed by the renewing of our mind. Scripture admonishes us to take every thought captive to make it obedient to Christ. Proverbs is a whole book dedicated to getting wisdom.

Now certainly, emotions and duty are absolutely necessary but they only come where the mind is been set ablaze by Christ.

Talking About China

Today I had lunch with a Missionary / Pastor who spent three years in Honk Kong Pastoring a Church there. He had several fascinating insights concerning the Chinese Church and Chinese culture, one of which really caught my attention.

He was saying that the Chinese government desire the moralism that is found in Judeo-Christianity in order to support their turn to capitalism. He said that many of them have come to learn that Communism does not give the moral underpinnings that is necessary to successfully pull off a expanding Capitalism.

However he also suggested that Chinese government officials realize that this is a dangerous game they are playing. While on one hand they desire a Judeo-Christian moralism, he also said that on the other hand they also understand that the Bible is a anti-statist book.

When he said this I was dumbfounded. Here he is testifying that Chinese Communist government officials understand that the Bible is a anti-statist book and I can’t seem to get large swaths of Reformed people in these united States to understand that the Bible is a anti-statist book. Quite to the contrary large swaths of the Reformed community seem to either think that Christianity can walk hand and hand with statism, or that Christianity doesn’t care one way or another about centralized government. The Chinese Communist government officials understand the Bible better than American Christian ministers and laymen.

Other interesting insights from his conversation were his explaining how many Chinese have completely lost categories and vocabulary to talk about an extra-mundane supernatural God. He says that for 60 years the Communists have beat into their heads that there is no God and so now they have lost the capacity and ability to talk God. He was not denying that the these sense of divine has been lost but only that the ability to communicate that sense has been largely lost. He noted that being back in America he is seeing the same thing in many “post-Christian” Americans.

He noted that in one of his studies with College age Americans he was teaching on God cutting covenant with Abraham. He was trying to communicate God’s goodness in making covenant with Abraham. He said that several of the students said that they, “didn’t want anything to do with a God who cut a heifer and birds in half.” I thought when he said that, “man, I need to get out more often.” If they are offended when God cuts a cow and birdies in half how much more are their heads going to spend when they get to the part where God puts His Son on a Cross?

Can it really be the case that the West has deteriorated so far that it will have nothing to do with a God who cuts cows and birdies in half because that is mean?

Pray for China. Pray for the West. If we completely throw off Christianity we will enter into a Dark Age the like which mankind has never known.