The Doctrine of Faith, Doubt, and Assurance: A Historical, Philosophical, and Theological Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Historical Analysis
2.1. Catholicism
One is able to know who does not place an obstacle though an intention to sin mortally and accepts the sacrament of absolution, that confers grace ex opera operato, and yet does not bring any other intention except not placing an obstacle, which is the cessation from the act and purpose of sinning, as Scotus would have it in IV.
2.2. Luther and Lutheranism
2.3. Calvin and Calvinism
In that covenant there is mutual obligation, both regard to God to be gracious and in regard to man to present his penance.
[I]t denotes the covenant of God with man, through which God by his goodness promises above all eternal life and he demands from man in turn his service and worship, with certain outward signs which are provided for confirmation. It is said to be two-sided or reciprocal because it consists of the reciprocal obligation of the two members of the covenant: from the side of God, a promise, and from the side of man the demand of a condition.
The covenant generally speaking is a mutual pact between two parties by which one member binds himself to do, give, or receive something under certain obligations.
Most importantly, this concept of the covenant provided a clear impetus to examine the human side of the arrangement and wonder whether the individual was living up to his or her side of the bargain. It made it necessary to examine the human condition and find out whether the individual had fulfilled his or her federal responsibility and had a right to claim divine promises or possess any personal assurance before God.In the covenant of God with man, there is something which God does and another which man does. God by his most eminent right commands or demands from man a service, love of himself, and compliance, and promises life to the one who loves and complies. By agreeing (astipulando) man promises to love and be obedient to God who demands and prescribes his duty, and by demanding in return (restipulando) from God he claims and expects with confidence life by right of the promise.
3. Philosophical/Theological Analysis
3.1. Easy Believism
3.2. Doubt
- How long, O Lord. Will you ignore me forever?
- How long will you hide your face from me?
- My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
- Why are you so far from delivering me,
- So far from the cry of anguish?
- O Lord, how long will you look on,
- Rescue my soul from their onslaught,
- My only life from these lions.
4. Concluding Remarks
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The words for the coming in the Greek NT (epiphaneia, apocalypsis, and parousia) all refer to the same basic idea of manifestation, unveiling, or presence. |
2 | For a further, more detailed account of the Catholic, Lutheran, and Reformed view of assurance, see (Strehle 1995, chps. 1 and 2). |
3 | See (Gregorius Magnus n.d.b, 6.58; 9.34, 54; 16.82; n.d.c, 38.14–16; Dudden 1967, 2.424). Gregory spoke of the parts of the sacrament as conversio mentis, confessio oris, and vinicata peccati. In the Schoolmen, the list became contritio cordis, confessio oris, and satisfactio operis. |
4 | See (Schaff 1977, 2.98–99, 131, 144, 152–53, 164–65; Thomas Aquinas 1964–1976, I-II, q.112, a.6; II-II, q.20, a.2). Thomas thought a “conjectural certitude” was possible through examining the signs of divine grace (a delight in God’s word, a desire to do God’s will, a sorrow for one’s sin, and an intention to sin no more (Thomas Aquinas 1964–1976, I-II, q.112, a.5; 1980, IV, d.9, q.1, a.3 [1.467b]). |
5 | (Concilium Tridentinum 1901–1930, 5.393, 484; 12.656): “Etsi canon ab omnibus recipitur, tamen pars illa, in qua asseritur, quod error sit dicere, iustificatos se certo scire esse in gratia, loquendo de certitudine fidei, generaliter loquendo ad omnibus probator; in aliquo vero casu videtur nonnullis doctoribus, quod quis potest certo scire certitudine fidei, se esse in gratia. Et ideo si hoc velint damnari, cupiunt audiri et discuti…. Si ergo Scotus (ut credo) tenuerit ex principiis fidei certudinem hanc, ut patet multis in locis, quae in sola vana fiducia se iactat, exclusis omnibus aliis, quae necessario requiruntur; Scotus vero, si certitudinem teneat, ut arbitror, eam tribuit fidei, dispositionibus praeviis, virtutis operis operati in sacramentis susceptioneque sacramentorum et eidem exterior operi in facto vel in voto, volens quodsi quispiam debet esse certus de gratia, quam habet, opus sit ut se disponat, faciens quantum in se est, et sine fictione credens sacramentum in voto vel facto suscipiat. Magnum ergo discrimen inter certitudem multorum Catholicorum et haereticorum…. Alteram viam, quae certa est omnino, declarant esse, qua per sacramentum infallibiliter ex opera operato, id est ex vi sacramenti, remissionem peccatorum et donationem gratiae consequimur. Eo autem certa est haec via, quoniam satis potest quis certus esse de se, quod habeat voluntatem recipiendi sacramentum; certus etiam esse potest, quod minime apponat obicem, quandoquidem esse potest certus se non actu mortaliter peccare et non habere voluntatem seu propositum peccandi in posterum; itaque si hoc modo suscipit saramentum, certus omnino est se se gratiam gratificantem recipere. Opinio igitur Scoti est, nos posse habere certitudinem gratiae sine ulla dubitatione”. |
6 | See (WA TR 1, nr. 94, 122; 526; 2, nr. 1490, 1890, 2654a; 4, nr. 4362; 5, nr. 6017; CR 6.159; Scheel 1929, pp. 167 [461], 193 [512], 200, 207 [538]; Selneccerus 1592, 2v–3r; Gerhard 1634–1637, 1.2, p.3, a.23, c.5 [&32b–33a]). Gerhard is citing an earlier source. Staupitz exhorts penitents in his writings to disregard their contrition and good works and trust (Vertrawen) in the words of absolution (Deutsche Schriften 1867, 1.18, 40, 126–28; Wolf 1971, p. 230). |
7 | See (CR 21. 185–86, 189; Chemnitz 1578, 1.383b). Peter Mastricht said that Lutherans, more than any other Protestants, demand personal belief in one’s salvation. (Mastricht 1715, 1.6, c.6, 27 (813b)). |
8 | See Commentarius in lib. Psalmorum. Pars I, 30:6, 90:10 [CO 31.295, 838]; Commentarius in lib. Isaiae, 61:2 [CO 37.373]; Commentarius in epist. Pauli ad Galatas, 6:7 [CO 50.261]; Praelectiones in lib. Ieremiae. Pars II, 20:14–16 [CO 38.354–55]; (Scott 2021, p. 143; Bouwsma 1988, 37). |
9 | See Commentarius in Iohannis Apostolis Epistolam, 3:14[CO 27.339]; (Miller 2020, pp. 133–34); CD II/2.335; (Niesel 1980, pp. 173–75). |
10 | Zwingli’s definition of faith suggested this type of doctrine. He spoke of faith as a “sign of election” (Z 2.167 (2); 4.118, 428; 6/1.172, 184, 648). However, Calvin probably developed this teaching in conjunction with Martin Bucer, his confidant. Bucer speaks definitively about uniting the will of Christ and the will of the Father together and so providing security for believers concerning their ultimate perseverance and election (Metaphrases et narrationes perpetuae epistolarum D. Pauli Apostoli, [S.1.1536], 359bff., 402–405, 2.240, 347—Bucer (1988); Calvinus Theologus (1976, p. 89)). |
11 | Karl Barth criticizes Calvin’s overall doctrine of predestination for making the Deus nudus absconditus the electing God above and beyond the revelation of God in Christ Jesus. He rejects conceiving of Christ as the elected means of a higher “good pleasure” in the Almighty to select only a certain few for salvation and condemn the rest. This concept makes the ultimate reason why God discriminates between humankind a mystery (CD II/2, 65–66, 69–72, 110–11, 156, 159, 338; Venema 2018a, pp. 37–38, 41, 43; cf. Berkouwer 1972, pp. 155–59). Barth’s criticism seems to have some merit for those who wish to reconcile the will of God and revelation of Christ together, but it is much too harsh. First, the Bible teaches that humans are finite and will never know all the mysteries of God (Dt. 29:29). Second, Barth fails to appreciate in this context how Calvin’s newfangled doctrine of eternal security made great strides in mitigating the dichotomy between the faith of the regenerate in the promises of Christ and the will of God. Third, Barth creates the same type of mystery when he makes the election of Christ and the salvation of the human race a matter of divine free choice. In other words, this choice has no debt to the divine nature or no counterpart in divine revelation. At one point, Barth recognizes the inconsistency and tries to distance his position from the Nominalists view of the Middle Ages that entertained the possibility of something “quite different” transpiring in the work of God through a “sovereign liberum arbitrium”, but he clearly protests too much (CD IV/1, 195). Jürgen Moltmann is more consistent with the intellectualist tradition and rejects Barth’s view of divine freedom. The communication of divine life to others comes from the divine essence, revealing what God is antecedently as Logos. God is love and cannot act in any so-called state of freedom without grace (Moltmann 1981, pp. 52ff., 105ff.). Unlike Moltmann, Barth hesitates to accept the doctrine of universalism, even if it represents the fundamental penchant of his theology. He hesitates because of his insistence on preserving some sense of divine freedom or the sovereign choice within the godhead to bestow grace on whomever the Father wills (CD IV/3, 477; Berkouwer 1956, pp. 112ff.; Miller 2020, p. 146). |
12 | See (Wolleb 1657, c.32, 1 [214]; Bucan 1625, 26–27 [284ff.]; Til 1704, 169 [12]; Heidegger 1700, 1.24, 94 [4128b]; Westminster Confession, XVII, 1–3; XVII, 4 (Schaff 1977, 3.636–37, 639–40)). |
13 | See (Beeke 1992, pp. 54–57; 1993, pp. 10–11, 20–21, 61–65; Venema 2018b, pp. 39, 43, 46). Beeke and Venema say the basic Reformed position subordinated the signs of grace to the promises and witness of the Spirit, or, at the very least, the Reformed recognized the need for discernment from the Holy Spirit to even speak of its fruits in their lives. Gaspar Olevian serves as the quintessential representative of the position (Olevian 1585, pp. 257–59). Greenbury finds some Puritans emphasizing the inward testimony of the Spirit and others self-examination although is not always clear between them. Kendall accuses the Calvinists of forsaking Calvin and grounding assurance on the inward and outward fruits of sanctification (Greenbury 2021, pp. 122–23; Kendall 1981, pp. 29–41). |
14 | CR 8.230–31; 14.486–87. |
15 | See (Bèze 1582, 1.10, 15–16, 687–90; 1571; Beeke 1991, pp. 82ff.; Kendall 1981, pp. 32ff; Zanchi 1619, 2.506 [De Natura Dei, 1577]; 7.230; 8.716–17 [Miscellanae, 1566]). Perkins translated parts of Zanchi’s De Natura Dei on assurance into English and two important treatises of Beza on the subject were also translated in 1570 and 1574. The two had a particular impact on the Puritans, but the practical syllogism became a part of the discussion and treatment of theologians in all Reformed Europe. |
16 | Zacharias Ursinus and Gaspar Olevian are regarded as the primary composers of the Heidelberg Catechism (1563). Ursinus emphasized the practical syllogism like Zanchi (another Heidelberg theologian) and the covenant as a mutua pactio. Olevian was much closer to Calvin on the doctrine of assurance considering the fruits of salvation secondary to the promises of Christ and the testimony of the Spirit. This was not surprising since Olevian looked to Jeremiah 31 and its emphasis upon grace in understanding the covenant much more than other federal theologians (Ursinus 1607, 128–29; 1584, 138; Olevian 1585, I, i, 1–4, 10–13; Beeke 1992, 56–57, 62–65; CD II/2, 335). |
17 | Lentham and Beeke speak of a mystical syllogism that finds an early expression in Ursinus and comes to the forefront in the seventeenth century (Lentham 1979, 191 as cited in (Beeke 1992, p. 57)). Perkins emphasizes both the practical syllogism and the bilateral covenant (Payne 2021b, p. 322). |
18 | See Abrahams Stepps by Faith (Eaton 1642b, pp. 176–77, 185). Eaton particularly found Luther’s commentary on Galatians (1535) inspiring, citing it no less than 106 times (Graebner 1991, vi, 154, 167, 182; Baker 1985, pp. 118, 120–21, 125). Eaton did not proceed as far as Johann Agricola and disparage the place of the law in our conversion (Graebner 1991, pp. 184–87, 193). |
19 | See WA 39/I, 82; TR 1.198, Nr. 458; 4.221, Nr. 4331; CR 7.678, 783–84; 15.810–11, 883, 895; 21.304, 421–23, 752; (Althaus 1975, pp. 246–47). |
20 | John Wesley and the early Methodists taught the possibility of an “entire sanctification” through a dramatic encounter with God outside the initial saving experience and influenced the later Holiness movement. Pentecostals came to view the “Baptism of the Holy Spirit” as a special blessing that came after the reception of saving grace and lifted the recipient to a new spiritual plateau (Marsden 1982, pp. 73–74, 93–94; Wesley 1995, pp. 106–11; Peters 1985, passim; Smith 1952, pp. 16–18, 28, 45–47; Berkouwer 1973, pp. 51–52). |
21 | See Carson 1992, p. 6. For example, he says at one point that not all Christians will be co-heirs with Christ in the kingdom of God (Hodges 1986, pp. 116, 123). |
22 | No one had enough faith to do something like move a mountain, even in biblical times. |
23 | The Canons of the Synod of Dort says that “believers in this life have to struggle with various carnal doubts, and that under grievous temptations they are not always sensible to this full assurance of faith and certainty of persevering” (V, xi [Schaff 1977, 3.573, 594]). |
24 | Both developed Machiavellian government policies that justified questionable acts and institutions like dueling, brothels, etc., considering them immoral but necessary for society to function. Bayle also had intellectual problems with traditional theistic proofs. |
25 | Tillich creates an extreme caricature of this modern division between faith and reason, claiming that no historical, critical, or scientific theory can favor or dismiss the revelation of God. Here he seems to take away with one hand what he supports with the other. He tends to lose all skepticism about his scientific skepticism. Cf. Augustine (n.d.), Confessiones, VI, 4 (PL 32.721), where he recognizes the problem with being dogmatic about his skepticism. |
26 | |
27 | Pascal thinks this wager is worth taking. Tillich thinks faith only exists with the threat of non-being. It must continually choose life in the midst of radical darkness or extinction. Radical faith and absolute doubt belong together in this paradox (Pascal 1958, pp. 53–67 (205–233); Tillich 1980, pp. 177–81). |
28 | See (Weber 1958, pp. 110–11, 114, 117, 157–60, 166–69, 230–31; Brocker 1995, pp. 505–6). Arminius was certainly wrong to think the Calvinist belief in predestination would zap them from any motivation to do the works of God, as if there was nothing one could do since everything was determined. |
29 | The “I” of Descartes’ Cogito is only postulated to be a “thinking thing” in a reflexive act, not in the pre-reflexive act of thinking. The reflection does not really reflect on the reflecting, or “what is present to me is what is not me”. Consciousness is there before it is known (Sartre 1977, ix–xi, pp. 149, 275; Heidegger 1982, 4.107, 113, 116; Copleston 1963, 4.106–107). This means we can only catch up to ourselves in retrospect or after we have already thought or done something (Ryle 1984, pp. 162–63, 166, 193–96). In the end, Ryle prefers not to pry into some occult entity behind what the person thinks and does as a whole (Ryle 1984, pp. 45–46, 50–51). |
30 | Wittgenstein thinks that “I know” is just a forceful intonation of frustration and should be replaced with “I believe” as the subjective affirmation of what is unproveable (Wittgenstein 1972, 30, 177–79, 245, 612, 669 [5, 25–26, 33, 81, 88]). Salvation involves the redemption of the whole person, not just the illumination of one aspect that dictates the rest. Socrates (and Plato) thought he possessed the knowledge of what was right and wrong and was able to state it with universal definitions. He equated knowledge and virtue, believing that morality was teachable and that no one willingly chose to do evil. Aristotle disputed this claim and thought humans were moral agents who often chose evil against right insight (Copleston 1962, 1.125–33, 233, 245; Aristotle 1962, III, 3 [150–53]). Some of the early church followed the Socratic tradition by connecting baptism with illumination (phōtismos) (Justin Martyr n.d., 61 [PG 6.421–22]; Barnard 1967, p. 141; Pseudo-Dionysius 1987, p. 210; Louth 1989, 58). The Amyraldians followed this tradition in Reformed circles, believing that the mind was the instrument of faith, that the will was subject to it, and that the Spirit need only illuminate the mind to secure salvation in the rest of our being, but most of the Reformed thought of salvation in holistic terms (Amyraut 1652–1660, 1.46–47; 2/2.412; 1658, pp. 122, 132–34). |
31 | This is the criticism of Thomas Goodwin (Goodwin 1861–1867, 8.344ff.). |
32 | Melanchthon is famous for speaking of fides in terms of fiducia (trust or assurance). See CR 21.163, 171 [Loci Communes] (Melanchthon 1521). |
33 | Philosophers like Heidegger and Gadamer speak of humans participating in ultimate reality or prepared in advance to express what is initially a primal aspect of their experience (Heidegger 1962, pp. 199, 208; Gadamer 1990, xxii, xxxi, pp. 133, 159, 488). |
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Strehle, S. The Doctrine of Faith, Doubt, and Assurance: A Historical, Philosophical, and Theological Analysis. Religions 2024, 15, 960. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080960
Strehle S. The Doctrine of Faith, Doubt, and Assurance: A Historical, Philosophical, and Theological Analysis. Religions. 2024; 15(8):960. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080960
Chicago/Turabian StyleStrehle, Stephen. 2024. "The Doctrine of Faith, Doubt, and Assurance: A Historical, Philosophical, and Theological Analysis" Religions 15, no. 8: 960. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080960
APA StyleStrehle, S. (2024). The Doctrine of Faith, Doubt, and Assurance: A Historical, Philosophical, and Theological Analysis. Religions, 15(8), 960. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080960