Entries in Men's Fellowship (4)
Men's Fellowship—Tonight
The OURC Men's Fellowship is tonight @ 7pm @ O'Sullivan's Irish Pub in Carlsbad Village.
Our topics of discussion will be "External & Effectual Calling" as these topics are confessed in the 16th–17th century Reformed confessions.
If you need a book, you may purchase one for $15 at Reformation Heritage Books. You may also get a copy locally at Westminster Seminary’s bookstore, but it’s $22.
Men's Fellowship—Wednesday Evening
The OURC Men's Fellowship is this Wednesday evening @ 7pm @ Giblin's Irish Pub in Carlsbad Village.
Our topics of discussion will be "Christ the Mediator, the Names of Christ, and the Natures of Jesus Christ" as these topics are confessed in the 16th–17th century Reformed confessions.
Men's Fellowship (1/2/08)—Recap
The Fall of Man, Original Sin, and Punishment
Reformed Confessions Harmonized, 46–51.
Points of Emphasis in the Confessions
Key
HC—Heidelberg Catechism
BC—Belgic Confession
CD—Canons of Dort
SHC—Second Helvetic Confession
WCF—Westminster Confession of Faith
WLC—Westminster Larger Catechism
WSC—Westminster Shorter Catechism
- Man was created in the image of God—good, righteous, holy, and capable to will the will of God (BC 14; SHC 8.1; CD 3/4.1, RE 2)
- Man willfully subjected himself to sin, death, and the curse (BC 14; SHC 8.1; CD 1.1, 3/4.1; WCF 6.6; WSC 13, 19; WLC 21, 27)
- Man gave ear to the words of the devil (BC 14; SHC 8.1; CD 3/4.1; WCF 6.1; WLC 21)
- Man corrupted his whole nature (BC 14, 15; CD 3/4 RE 3, 4; WCF 6.2, 3, 5; WSC 18; WLC 25)
- Man became wicked, perverse, and corrupt (BC 14; CD 3/4.1)
- Man lost his excellent gifts (BC 14; CD 3/4.1)
- The remains of man’s gifts are insufficient to save (BC 14; CD 3/4.4)
- Through Adam original sin passed to all (BC 15; SHC 8.2, 5; CD 1.1; WSC 16)
- Original sin is a hereditary disease in infants (BC 15; SHC 8.1, 2; CD 3/4.2, 3; WCF 6.3; WSC 18; WLC 22, 26)
- Original sin is the root of actual sins (BC 15; SHC 8.5; WCF 6.3, 4; WSC 18; WLC 25)
- Original sin is sufficient to condemn man (BC 15; HC 10, 12; CD 1.1, 2, RE 5; CD 3/4.1)
- We reject the error of Pelagius that says sin is a matter of imitation only (BC 15; SHC 8.6; CD 3/4.2)
- Man is prone to all evil (SHC 8.2; CD 3/4.3; WCF 6.4; WLC 25)
- Actual sins are worthy of eternal punishment (HC 11, 12; SHC 8.3, 4; CD 2.1; WLC 29)
What of the Strange Language in Belgic Confession Article 14?
During our discussion at our recent Men's Fellowship, the question came up concerning what to make of the strange sounding words of Belgic Confession, article 14: But being in honor, he understood it not, neither knew his excellency, but willfully subjected himself to sin and consequently to death and the curse, giving ear to the words of the devil.
What follows is an excerpt from my forthcoming commentary on the Belgic Confession, With Heart and Mouth.
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The Depths of Depravity
With all of this in mind, we can understand why this article speaks of the heights and depths. It was from this height of creation, with the possibility of an even higher existence, that Adam fell. Adam, the crown of God’s creative acts, the only creature made in God’s image and likeness, the creature to whom God gave dominion, and the one with whom God made a covenant, broke that covenant by transgressing its commandment. The Confession continues, as it describes the depths of Adam’s sin:
But being in honor, he understood it not, neither knew his excellency, but willfully subjected himself to sin and consequently to death and the curse, giving ear to the words of the devil. For the commandment of life, which he had received, he transgressed; and by sin separated himself from God, who was his true life.
The phrase, “he understood it not, neither knew his excellency,” is one that is “unique to Reformed symbolics.”26 It is most likely an allusion to the first half of Psalm 49:20 (48:21 in the Latin Vulgate). The Confession says, “Truly, while being in honor” (Verum quum in honore esset), reflecting the Vulgate’s, “Man when he was in honor” (homo cum in honore esset).
On a prima facie reading, this language sounds like the medieval doctrine of the donum superadditum, which taught that Adam was created deficient and that a super-added gift of grace was given to him after his creation. As R. Scott Clark correctly states, “The medieval view makes sin an ontological or metaphysical problem rather than a moral legal one.”27 Yet the Confession itself militates against this view, saying that Adam was made “good, righteous, and holy, capable in all things to will agreeably to the will of God.” Clark has pointed out that there are statements in other Reformed writings that use similarly strange language. For example, in Zacharius Ursinus’s Summa Theologiae of 1561–62, he stated in question and answer 25 that original sin is “guilt because of the fall of our first parents, ignorance and doubt concerning God and his will” (emphasis mine).28 In 1626 Johannes Wollebius explained the Fall as “thoughtlessness and meddlesomeness.”29
If our Confession, along with Reformed theology in general, rejects the Roman Catholic doctrine of the donum superadditum, what are we to make of this language, which seems so strange and so difficult? In the first place, as in our discussion of the context of the Confession as well as the suggestion of Saravia that it was originally a sermon of some sort, we must let this mid-sixteenth-century document speak for itself. The sermonic tone and de Brès' life on the run must be appreciated and accounted for. Second, the language of “understood it not . . . neither knew his excellency,” needs to be recognized in the context of the emerging Reformed covenant theology. The teaching that Adam was at the height of creation, yet through the trial of the commandment of life could have received an even higher life, helps us to see that what de Brès is saying is that Adam did not understand and know in the sense that he did not embrace what was true of himself to enable him to obey the command and reject Satan’s temptation.30 John of Damascus alluded to the verse from the Psalter in question (see his previous quote) and applied it to the concept of the promise and threat held out to Adam in the probationary command: if Adam were obedient “he should share eternal blessedness and live to all eternity,” but if Adam were disobedient, “Comparing himself in ignorance of his true dignity to the senseless beasts, and shaking off his Creator’s yoke, and neglecting His divine injunction, he will be liable to death and corruption.”
The fact that Adam was not deficient in knowledge and in need of Rome’s donum is confirmed by the fact that the very next clauses in the Confession speak of his active rejection of what God said for what the Devil said: he “knowingly” (sciens) and “willingly” (volens) subjected himself to sin by “giving ear to the words of the devil.”
Because of this willful transgression, Adam suffered the consequences of God’s curse: “You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die” (Genesis 2:16–17). Therefore he “separated himself from God, who was his true life” by transgressing the commandment of life.
26. R. Scott Clark, “Article 14—Of the Creation and Fall.” Christian Observer 173:22 (November 17, 1995): 25.
27. Ibid., 25; cf. Muller, Dictionary, 96–97.
28. Lyle D. Bierma with Charles D. Gunnoe, Jr., Karin Maag, and Paul W. Fields, An Introduction to the Heidelberg Catechism, Texts and Studies in Reformation and Post-Reformation Thought, ed. Richard A. Muller (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker, 2005), 166.
29. Wollebius, Compendium Theologiae Christianae, 67.
30. This is also the interpretation given by De Jong, The Church’s Witness to the World, 258.
Men's Fellowship—Tonight
Just a reminder that tonight our Men's Fellowship meets 7pm in the dart room at Tom Giblin's Irish Pub (640 Grand Ave # A, Carlsbad, CA 92008;760.729.7234). Our purpose is to discuss the Reformed Faith and our delight in it by reading through the book, Reformed Confessions Harmonized.
Tonight's reading is pages 46–51.
