Dogma and History in Victorian Scotland
Todd Regan Statham
Faculty of Religious Studies McGill University
Montreal, Quebec
February 2011
A Thesis submitted to McGill University in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
© Todd Regan Statham
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Table of Contents
Abstract v Résumé vii Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations x Introduction 1 Chapter 1: The Scottish Presbyterian Church ‘in’ History 18 1.1. Introduction 18 1.2. Church, Scripture, and Tradition 19 1.2.1. Scripture and Tradition in Roman Catholicism 20 1.2.2. Scripture and Tradition in Protestantism 22
1.2.3. A Development of Dogma? 24 1.3. Church, Doctrine, and History 27 1.3.1. Historical Criticism of Doctrine in the Reformation 29 1.3.2. Historical Criticism of Doctrine in the Enlightenment 32
1.3.3. Historical Criticism of Doctrine in Romanticism and Idealism 35
1.4. Church: Scottish and Reformed 42 1.4.1. The Scottish Church and the Continent 42 1.4.2. Westminster Calvinism 44 1.4.3. The Evangelical Revival 48 1.4.4. Enlightened Legacies 53 1.4.5. Romantic Legacies 56 1.4.6. The Free Church and the United Presbyterians in Victorian
Scotland 61 1.5. Conclusion 65 Chapter 2: William Cunningham, John Henry Newman, and the Development of Doctrine 67 2.1. Introduction 67 2.2. William Cunningham 69 2.3. An Essay on the Development of Doctrine 72 2.3.1. Against “Bible Religion” and the Church Invisible 74 2.3.2. Cunningham on Scripture and Church 78
2.3.3. The Theory of Development 82
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2.3.4. Cunningham’s Response 87 2.3.5. Newman and Cunningham on Revelation 89 2.3.6. Summary 93
2.4. Cunningham’s Historical Theology 94 2.5. Cunningham on ‘Calvin and Calvinism’ 100 2.6. Conclusion 104 Chapter 3: Oxford—Erlangen—Edinburgh: Robert Rainy on the Historicity of Church and Doctrine 109 3.1. Introduction 109 3.2. Robert Rainy 112 3.3. Delivery and Development of Christian Doctrine 115 3.3.1. Church, Doctrine, and the History of Doctrine 116 3.3.2. Doctrine in the Old Testament 118 3.3.3. Hofmann and Heilsgeschichte 120 3.3.4. Doctrine in the New Testament 125 3.3.5. The Formation of Doctrine 129 3.3.6. The Development of Doctrine 135 3.3.7. Confessing Doctrine 139 3.4. Conclusion 143 Chapter 4: A. B. Bruce and the Ritschlian Critique of Doctrine 155 4.1. Introduction 155 4.2. A. B. Bruce 159 4.3. Ritschlianism and Scottish Theology 162 4.3.1. Ritschlian Keynotes 162 4.3.2. Ritschlianism in Scotland 168 4.4. Jesus of Nazareth and the Christ of Chalcedon 170 4.4.1. The Humiliation of the Christ 170 4.4.2. ‘Back to Christ’—Revelation and History 174 4.4.3. Doctrine and Confession 182 4.5. Conclusion 195 Chapter 5: James Orr: the Logic of the History of Dogma 201 5.1. Introduction 201 5.2. James Orr 204 5.3. “Hegeling” and Dogmengeschichte: Three German Examples 206 5.3.1. Kliefoth 206 5.3.2. Thomasius 209 5.3.3. Dorner 210 5.3.4. Conclusion 212 5.4. The Progress of Dogma 214 5.4.1. History and Dogma 214 5.4.2. Religious Foundations 220
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5.4.3. Orr’s Response to Harnack’s Theory of the Rise of Catholicism 221 5.4.4. God 225 5.4.5. Humanity 229 5.4.6. Christ 230 5.4.7. Soteriology I 232 5.4.8. Soteriology II 234
5.4.9. Confessionalization 235 5.4.10. Eschatalogy 237
5.5. Conclusion 242 Conclusion 251 1. Introduction 251 2. Scripture and Tradition 253 3. Jesus Christ 260 4. Church 263 5. Confessing the Faith 268 5.1. Foundations 268 5.2. Fundamentals 271 Bibliography 275
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Abstract
That the study of the history of Christian doctrine and dogma had its
heyday in nineteenth-century German Protestantism is well known. What is
not well known is that theologians in two Presbyterian denominations in
Victorian Scotland, the Free Church and the United Presbyterians, made the
most concerted attempts in an English-speaking Protestant tradition to account
historically for the genesis and progress of doctrine. This dissertation recovers
this half-century of Reformed theological labour and neglected chapter in
Victorian church history through close analysis of how prominent theologians
in these evangelical bodies wrestled with the new, disconcerting idea that
doctrine develops in history.
The story that emerges tells of Scottish Presbyterian theology in the
period c. 1845-c. 1900 coming to recognize that church doctrine was not
simply the repetition of biblical teaching. Doctrine was the church’s
confession of God’s truth—and the church was in history. Nonetheless,
because the historical spirit was far from monolithic in the nineteenth century,
the manner in which theologians from this tradition negotiated their Reformed
and evangelical doctrinal inheritance with the claims of history was markedly
diverse.
William Cunningham (1805-61) rejected John Henry Newman’s
groundbreaking An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (1845) by
reiterating the classical Protestant doctrine of the sufficiency of Scripture.
Although subsequent theologians also held this belief, their understanding of
revelation was being historicized. Robert Rainy (1826-1906) drew upon a
concept of “salvation history” then current among conservative German
theologians to argue that doctrine was not deposited in Scripture as
Cunningham assumed; rather, it formed as the church interpreted God’s acts in
history. Rainy’s tacit admission that doctrine, being historically conditioned,
was also historically conditional was radicalized by A. B. Bruce (1831-1899).
In concert with the influential Ritschlian critique of dogma, Bruce urged
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evangelical theology to tear down the “scholastic” dogmas of yesteryear to
rebuild anew on the witness of the historical Jesus. In firm opposition, James
Orr (1844-1913) creatively deployed philosophical idealism to show how
orthodox dogma had developed over centuries as the rational unfolding of
Spirit in history. Accordingly, the system of doctrine maintained in
evangelical Protestantism was largely inviolable.
Along with summarizing some themes common in the diverse handling
of the problem of history and dogma by Free Church and United Presbyterian
divines, the concluding chapter tentatively suggests where their labours
intersect contemporary ecumenical interest in the issue of the historical
development of doctrine.
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Résumé
Il est bien connu que l'histoire du dogme et de la doctrine chétienne a
connu son apogée au sein du protestantisme allemand du dix-neuvième siècle.
Ce qui est moins connu c'est que des théologiens de deux dénomination
presbytériennes de l'écosse victorienne, la Free Church et les Presbytériens
Unis, ont fait le plus d'efforts concertés, au sein d'une tradition protestante
anglophone, de rendre compte historiquement de la genèse et du progrès de la
doctrine. Cette dissertation couvre ce demi-siècle de travail théologique
réformé, un chapitre négligé de l'histoire de l'église, particulièrement par une
analyse attentive de la manière dont d'éminents théologiens des deux corps
évangéliques sus-mentionnés ont lutté avec cette idée que la doctrine connaît
des développements dans l'histoire. Le récit qui en émerge rend compte de la théologie presbytérienne
écossaise dans la période débutant dans les environs de 1845 à 1900 venant à
reconnaître que la doctrine ne se cantonnait pas seulement à rèpéter les
enseignements bibliques. La doctrine était la confession de l'Église Par rapport
la vérité de Dieu – une église située dans l'histoire. Mais parce que l'esprit
historique du temps était loin d'être monolithique, la manière dont les
théologiens ont composé tant avec leur héritage doctrinal réformé et
évangélique que les revendications de l'histoire fut marqué par la diversité.
William Cunningham (1805-61) a rejeté le document innovateur de John
Henry Newman, An essay on the ChristianDoctrine (1845) en rehitérant la
position protestante classique sur la suffisance de l'Écriture. Par contre, même
s'ils partageaient cette position, des théologiens ultérieurs avaient une
compréhension plus historique de la révélation. Robert Rainy (1826-1906)
utilisa le concept « d'histoire du salut » alors en usage chez les théologiens
conservateurs allemands pour faire valoir que la doctrine n'était pas contenue,
proprement dit, dans l'écriture comme le suggérait Cunningham, mais plutôt
elle prit fome à mesure que l'Église a interprété l'inetervention de Dieu dans
l'histoire. Cette admission tacite de Rainy, à savoir que la doctrine étant
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historiquement conditionnée était aussi historiquement conditionnelle, fut
radicalisée par A.B.Bruce (1831-1899). De concert avec l'influente critique
Ritschlienne du dogme, Bruce a poussé la théologie évangélique à mettre en
pièces les dogmes « scholastiques » d'hier afin de reconstruire à neuf sur le
témoignage du Jésus historique. Complètement à l'opposé, James Orr (1844-
1913) a, de manière créative, déployé un idéalisme philosophique afin de
démontrer comment le dogme orthodoxe a pris forme à travers les siècles
comme le dévoilement rationnel graduel de l'Esprit dans l'histoire. Par
conséquent, le système de doctrine maintenu dans le protestantisme
évangélique était en grande partie inviolable.
Tout en résumant certain thèmes communs dans le maniement du
problème de l'histoire et du dogme par les théologiens de la Free Church et de
l'Église Presbytérienne Unie, le chapître final suggère prudemment les lieux
où leurs travaux croisent l'intérêt oecuménique contemporain dans la
problématique du développent historique de la doctrine.
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Acknowledgements It is remarkable how many people had a part in a work that bears my name alone on the title page! With pleasure I acknowledge the considerable debt to the family members, friends, colleagues, and institutions that have helped me out in diverse ways over the course of my doctoral studies. Research was undertaken in several cities across several countries, and the library staffs at The Presbyterian College (Montreal), the Johannes a Lasco Bibliothek (Emden), New College (Edinburgh), and the Department of Protestant Theology at the University of Hamburg were especially helpful. I’m thankful too to Prof. Anselm Steiger of the Fachbereich Evangelische Theologie der Universität Hamburg, who kindly welcomed me as a guest researcher. A number of scholars generously gave of their time to read the thesis proposal or draft chapters of this dissertation. For their comments, criticisms, and encouragement, I’m very grateful to: Torrance Kirby, James MacLeod, Peter Erb, Kenneth Stewart, Michael Honeycutt, and Barry Mack. My father, James Statham, proofread the final draft for spelling and grammar. I wish especially to thank my Doktorvater, Douglas Farrow, who promptly returned draft chapters to me well marked up by corrections and not a few thought-provoking comments. Just as important, the subject matter of this study owes to his challenge to me during my doctoral comprehensive exams that Protestants do not take seriously enough the role of the church in the formation of doctrine. The Stanford and Priscilla Reid Trust, the Cameron Doctoral Bursary Fund of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, and the Faculty of Religious Studies at McGill University contributed financially to my doctoral studies. Their generosity is most appreciated and was very necessary. It was also a pleasure to spend a summer undertaking preliminary research at the Johannes a Lasco Bibliothek in Emden, Germany, as a sponsored Stipendiat under the kind oversight of Herman Selderhuis. Finally, I’m deeply grateful to my parents and family, as well as my in-laws in Germany, for their moral, spiritual, and practical support over the past years. One of my daughter’s very first sentences was ‘Daddy arbeitet books”—delivered with her face squished up against the glass window of the office door. But Sophia and Mio were usually pretty good about leaving me to my books even when there were clearly more fun things at hand to do. And I can hardly express how grateful I am to my wife Annika Völtz for her selflessness, patience, and strength over the past six years. Suffice to say that my doctoral studies could not have been completed without her.
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Abbreviations
C of S Church of Scotland C of E Church of England FC Free Church of Scotland UP United Presbyterian Church UFC United Free Church BDE Biographical Dictionary of Evangelicals DDCD Delivery and Development of Christian Doctrine DSTCH Dictionary of Scottish Theology and Church History ED Evangelium und Dogma LThK Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche PD The Progress of Dogma. PRRD Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics PT Protestant Theology in the Nineteenth Century RGG Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart TRE Theologische Realenzyklopädie
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Introduction
Dogma, History, and Presbyterian Theology in
Victorian Scotland
“History”—according to Wolfhart Pannenberg—“is the most
comprehensive horizon of Christian theology.”1 But it was not always so.
There was a time when history did not dictate how we may seek to view God,
Bible, church, and world.
Scholars debate and dither over when to date history’s victory over the
western consciousness. There is much to be said for Karl Löwith’s claim that
it was (ironically) the French Revolution, “with its destruction of tradition,”
that exerted a massive “historicizing effect upon the consciousness of its
contemporaries. Thenceforth the time of the present, in contrast to the entire
‘past’, views itself expressly as belonging to the course of history, looking
toward the future.”2 This places the Victorians (c. 1835-1900) and their
American and Continental contemporaries among the first generations to
consciously perceive themselves as “belonging to the course of history.”
Indeed, while popular perception nowadays often holds the Victorian era as “a
stiff, rigid-backed, whale-boned, chin-up, aspidistra age,”3 the Victorians held
themselves as living in an age of unprecedented change and dizzying
development. “It might be difficult to lay one’s finger on any half-century in
the world’s history during which changes so rapid, so profound, so fruitful,
and so permanent have taken place,” summed up a Scottish New Testament
professor in 1889. “Every department of human thought and activity has felt
1 Wolfhart Pannenberg, “Redemptive Event and History,” in Basic Questions in Theology, Vol. 1, trans. George H. Kehm (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1970), 15. 2 Karl Löwith, From Hegel to Nietzsche: The Revolution in Nineteenth-Century Thought, trans. David E. Green (New York: Columbia UP, 1964). 3 Horton Davies, “Liturgical Reform in Nineteenth-Century English Congregationalism,” in Scholarship, Sacraments and Service, ed. Daniel Clendenin and David Buschart (Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen, 1990), 105.
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the touch of the new influences.”4 Even that department of thought that
handles eternal matters could not keep aloof from change.
Yet perhaps nowhere else was the “triumph of history” so bitterly
contested as in Christian theology.5 There, history’s eventual victory left many
sore losers. Scholars have often visited the nineteenth-century battlefield sites
of Protestant and Catholic theology: the Bible, where the rise of an historical
consciousness challenged its credibility and changed its interpretation; Jesus,
whom the historical criticism of the gospels made more comfortably human to
some believers but disconcertingly less divine to others; worship, as many
churches came to rediscover (or in some cases imagine) liturgical roots in a
common catholic soil or, alternately, update venerable prayer books and piety
in the name of relevant religion; confessions of faith, as church courts,
periodicals, and seminaries hosted hot debates over how to speak “the old, old
story”6 in an age of bewildering newness.
The churches’ understanding of doctrine was also transformed in the
matrix of historical understanding. As Jean Daniélou has argued, Christianity
came of age under the dominant worldview of Hellenism, where divine truth
was held to consist “in the unmoved eternal order of Ideas.”7 As such,
traditional Christianity—Orthodox, Catholic, and Protestant—has considered
its doctrines to be timelessly true and permanently valid. By the nineteenth
century, however, not only were historians’ vastly improved critical tools
proving beyond any doubt that orthodoxy had a long and painful gestation, the
whole classical mindset was being overthrown by the historicizing of
consciousness. Truth was not static but living, and to be alive was to change,
and to remain faithful to the living truth was to change often.8 Accordingly,
the study of the history of dogma and doctrine found its heyday in the
nineteenth century, especially on the Continent. Efforts then to scrutinize the
4 Marcus Dods, Recent Progress in Theology. Inaugural Lecture, New College, Edinburgh, November 6th, 1889 (Edinburgh: MacNiven & Wallace, 1889), 6. 5 The phrase comes from S. J. Case, The Christian Philosophy of History (Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1943). 6 A. Katherine Hankey, “Tell me the old, old story” (1866), http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/t/e/tellmoos.htm. 7 Jean Daniélou, The Lord of History, trans. Nigel Abercrombie (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1958), 1. Cited in Malcolm Yarnell, The Formation of Christian Doctrine (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2007), 168. 8 Paraphrasing John Henry Newman, An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, 6th ed. (1878; reprint, Notre Dame: U of Notre Dame P, 1989), 40.
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origins and development of Christian doctrine have been continually revisited
by scholars to observe their unsettling effects on their own age as well as, in
the case of truly epochal works by Ferdinand Christian Baur, John Henry
Newman, Adolph von Harnack and others, for their value for every age in
either helping the church to distinguish yesterday’s confession of the gospel
from what needs to be most said today or to hear the common chorus in the
church’s proclamation of the gospel over the ages.
A neglected part of this particular nineteenth-century religious
‘battlefield’ finds theologians in two smallish, evangelical Presbyterian
denominations in Scotland, the Free Church [FC] and the United Presbyterians
[UP] (which united in 1900 as the United Free Church [UFC]), making the
most concerted and impressive attempts in an English-speaking Protestant
tradition to account historically for the genesis and progress of doctrine.9 That
they balanced strong affirmations of ‘the faith once delivered’ (Jude 3) and
firm commitment to the central tenets of their Reformed and evangelical
inheritance with an increasing openness to the historical spirit, and that most
kept this balance with assistance from conservative German theology, makes
their engagement with the problem of history and dogma worthy of closer
study. This dissertation retrieves this significant half-century of theological
labor. True, historians have long noted the evangelical Presbyterian tradition’s
frequent appearance at the Victorian flashpoints of conflict between vested
theological positions and the new claims of history. The last decades of the
nineteenth century especially saw controversies over biblical criticism, creedal
revision, and changes to the auditory and monochromatic worship of the
Reformed tradition.10 But as yet no study has examined this tradition’s
9 Peter Toon, The Development of Doctrine in the Church (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1979), xiv. Toon first turned my attention to this period. 10 On the Bible see especially Nigel M. de S. Cameron, Biblical Higher Criticism and the Defence of Infallibilism in 19th Century Britain (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen, 1987); Richard Riesen, Criticism and Faith in Late Victorian Scotland (Lanham: UP of America, 1988); Gerald Parsons, “Biblical Criticism in Victorian Britain: From Controversy to Acceptance?” in Religion in Victorian Britain, Vol. 2: Controversies (Manchester: U of Manchester P, 1988), 238-257; Timothy Larson, “Bishop Colenso and His Critics: The Strange Emergence of Biblical Criticism in Victorian England,” SJT 50 (1997): 433-458; A. C. Cheyne, “The Bible and Change in the Nineteenth Century,” in Studies in Scottish Church History (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 2000), 123-138; Iain D. Campbell, Fixing the Indemnity: The Life and Work of Sir George Adam Smith (1856-1942) (Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2004). On the confessions see especially A. C. Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk: Victorian Scotland’s Religious Revolution (Edinburgh: Saint Andrews P, 1984), 60-87; Kenneth R. Ross, Church and Creed
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confrontation with the problem of the historical genesis and development of
doctrine.
This is regrettable on several counts. Firstly, as long as the most
serious attempt among English-speaking Protestants to wrestle with the
problem of history for dogma remains unexplored, our understanding of
modern Protestant history remains incomplete. Indeed, the missing piece
might just prompt historians to look again at the whole picture of Victorian
Protestantism. To say, as one student recently has, that “[t]he issue of doctrinal
development was not of great concern to evangelicals during the nineteenth
century” suggests visiting the children’s sin upon their parents.11 Secondly,
focusing attention on the topic of doctrinal development not only complements
existing scholarship on the nineteenth-century historical criticism of the Bible,
debates over confessional standards, changing patterns of worship, etc., it
integrates it. This is because of the nature of dogma as a window to an entire
religious system. As will become very clear over the course of this study, a
given church tradition’s position on a host of fundamental theological topics—
revelation, authority, ecclesiology, even soteriology—is tangled up in how it
accounts for continuity and change in Christian belief, i.e., whether it admits
or denies doctrinal development.12 This study of the problem of doctrinal
development in the context of Victorian-era Presbyterianism and
evangelicalism in Scotland provides a broad theological vista in which many
of the other profound challenges to Christianity in the nineteenth century can
in Scotland. The Free Church Case 1900-1904 and its Origins (Edinburgh: Rutherford House, 1988); Peter Matheson, “Transforming the Creed,” in Scottish Christianity in the Modern World: In Honour of A. C. Cheyne, ed. Stewart J. Brown (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 2000), 119-131; James Lachlan MacLeod, The Second Disruption: the Free Church in Victorian Scotland and the Origins of the Free Presbyterian Church (East Linton: Tuckwell, 2000). On worship see especially Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk, 88-109; Horton Davies, Worship and Theology in England, Vol. 2 (1961; reprint, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996); Charles C. Cashdollar, A Spiritual Home: Life in British and American Reformed Congregations, 1830-1915 (University Park: The Pennsylvania State UP, 2000); Douglas Murray, “Lay Attitudes to Liturgical Change in the Victorian Church in Scotland,” in Frömmigkeit unter den Bedingungen der Neuzeit, ed. Reiner Braun and Wolf-Friedrich Schäufele (Darmstadt and Kassel: Verlag der Hessischen Kirchengeschichtlichen Vereinigung, 2001), 293-300. 11 Steven Oldham, “Alister E. McGrath and Evangelical Theories of Doctrinal Development,” (PhD diss., Baylor University, 2000), 6. 12 Modern German theology has paid such close attention to the topic of the development of doctrine—in sharp contrast to Anglo-American theology—in part because of its absorbing interest in theological foundations [Fundamentaltheologie] and method. See further Matthias Petzholdt/Werner Jeanrond, “Fundamentaltheologie,” in RGG4 3, 426-36.
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be seen as diverse responses to a single challenge: the rise of an historical
consciousness.
Why did a story of such potential interest to the study of modern
Christianity end up in the dustbin of church history? The answer lies with the
interpretative grid typical of the history of modern theology that routinely
over-invests liberalizing trends. When the historiography of nineteenth-
century theology takes as its parameters the publication of Schleiermacher’s
Speeches on Religion in 1799 and Harnack’s lectures on The Essence of
Christianity delivered exactly one hundred years later, what else is to be
expected than the sort of conclusion one commonly reads? “Most historians
would accept the verdict of B. M. G. Reardon that liberalism was the
characteristic Christian theology of the nineteenth century.”13 This simply is
not true. The history of modern Protestant thought is lagging behind the
church history of modern Protestantism. My project converges with a
revisionist reading of nineteenth-century church history that does not put
foremost processes of secularization or liberalization but rather the story of the
dominance of a confident, internationally focused evangelicalism.14 By
revisiting the theological labors of the evangelical Presbyterian tradition in the
Victorian era—the FC and the UPs were consciously and exclusively
evangelical bodies in a manner that the broader Church of Scotland, despite
having a large evangelical constituency, was not—a tradition then at the
13 Fisher Humphreys, Nineteenth Century Evangelical Theology (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 1983), 12. Accounts of nineteenth-century theology and church life that reflect this plotline include almost all the standard texts: Owen Chadwick, The Victorian Church, 2 vol. (London: Adam & Charles Black, 1966-1970); Claude Welch, Protestant Thought in the Nineteenth Century, 2 vol. (New Haven: Yale UP, 1972-1985); B. M. G. Reardon: Religious Thought in the Victorian Age: A Survey from Coleridge to Gore, 2nd ed. (London: Longman, 1995); James Livingston, Religious Thought in the Victorian Age: Challenges and Reconceptions (New York and London: Continuum, 2007). My criticism in no way implicates the quality of these excellent works! 14 Signal contributions include Boyd Hilton, The Age of Atonement: The Influence of Evangelicalism on Social and Economic Thought, 1795-1865 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988); Ulrich Gäbler, ‘Auferstehungszeit’: Erweckungsprediger des 19. Jahrhunderts (München: C. H. Beck, 1991); Michael Gauvreau, The Evangelical Century: College and Creed in English Canada from the Great Revival to the Great Depression (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s UP, 1991); Callum Brown, Religion and Society in Scotland since 1707 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 1997); David Bebbington, The Dominance of Evangelicalism: The Age of Spurgeon and Moody (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2005); John Wolffe, The Expansion of Evangelicalism: The Age of More, Wilberforce, Chalmers and Finney (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2007).
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vanguard of international evangelicalism, this dissertation is retrieving an
important component of mainstream modern church history.
This faulty interpretative grid wields a particularly tenacious grip on
Reformed scholars because of Karl Barth. The massive dogmatic system of the
great Reformed doctor ecclesiae so overwhelmed the churches of his tradition
as to silence prior theological agendas. Many Reformed scholars read the
history of nineteenth-century theology with neo-orthodox lenses as the
liberalization of theology culminating in Barth’s revolt during the Great War;
anticipations of Barth are sought among earlier theologians; his theology is
wielded as a measuring stick.15 But the “Barthian captivity of the history of
modern Christian thought” poorly serves Reformed Protestantism in Victorian
Britain.16 The University of Hamburg theologian Hermann Fischer notes that
the Great War was an Epochenwende only for German theology, and even
then really only for German Protestant theology; he adds that the grid that
finds all nineteenth-century roads leading to Barth has been crumbling for
some time among historians of German Protestantism.17 This project, then,
reflects the work of scholars who eschew a conveniently clean break between
nineteenth-century “liberal” Protestantism and a “conservative” post World
War 1 theology.18 It wishes to listen to nineteenth-century Reformed theology
to hear its own voices speaking to the present rather than for the echo of Barth.
15 E.g., A. I. C. Heron, A Century of Protestant Theology (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1980); Thomas F. Torrance, Scottish Theology (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1999). Notable exceptions to this are Brian Gerrish and Bruce McCormack. 16 I came across this phrase in Michael Aune, “Discarding the Barthian Spectacles, Part I: Recent Scholarship in the History of Early 20th Century German Protestant Theology,” Dialog 43 (2004): 223-32. 17 Hermann Fischer, Protestantische Theologie in 20. Jahrhundert (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2002), 13. 18 E.g. Hendrikus Berkhof, Two Hundred Years of Theology, trans. John Vriend (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1989); Jan Rohls, Protestantische Theologie der Neuzeit, 2 vol. (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1997); Eckhard Lessing, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen evangelischen Theologie von Albrecht Ritschl bis zu Gegenwart, 2 vol. (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2000); Gary Dorrien, The Barthian Revolt in Modern Theology: Theology without Weapons (Louisville: WJK, 2000). Among English language theologians Alan P. F. Sell has especially influenced my approach, e.g. Theology in Turmoil: The Roots, Course and Significance of the Conservative-Liberal Debate in Modern Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1986); Defending and Declaring the Faith: Some Scottish Examples (Exeter: Paternoster, 1987); Testimony and Tradition: Studies in Reformed and Dissenting Thought (Burlington: Ashgate, 2005).
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My dissertation tells the story of how “the category of the historical”
challenged and changed the understanding of the form and function of church
doctrine in the evangelical Presbyterian tradition in Victorian Scotland.19 It
does this by examining attempts by select theologians to write historical
accounts of the origins and/or transmission of doctrine during the period
bookended by William Cunningham’s bald rejection of John Henry Newman’s
An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (1845) and James Orr’s
popular The Progress of Dogma (1901). The theologians have been chosen not
only on account of their Victorian stature, but also because each uniquely
represented a “typical” nineteenth-century response to the challenge of history
for church doctrine. The mind of each theologian thus helpfully opens a
window of sorts upon the wider theological, ecclesial, and intellectual context
in which his generation wrestled with the problem of history and doctrine.
The story that emerges tells of Presbyterians coming to recognize that
church doctrine was not simply the repetition of the teaching of the Bible.
Doctrine was the church’s confession of God’s truth—and the church was in
history. As the current of history was felt to quicken and purl with every
passing decade, it was hotly debated whether orthodox and Reformed
doctrinal standards were anchors holding them back from genuine doctrinal
progress or a steadying rudder for treacherous waters. Marcus Dods, professor
and principal of the FC/UFC’s New College, may have wagered that “[t]hose
of us who have been…inculcated with Calvinism are not likely to take much
injury from contact with modern thought,”20 but, in fact, the historical spirit
was forcing Presbyterians to question precisely what aspects of their Calvinist
identity should be maintained for present Christian witness and what were
better left in the past.
The analysis is especially sensitive to three things. First, because “the
category of the historical” in the nineteenth century was itself ambiguous—it
might reference, e.g., the gothic imagination of romanticism, idealism’s march
19 The phrase comes from Jaroslav Pelikan, Historical Theology: Continuity and Change in Christian Doctrine (London: Hutchison and Co., 1971). 20 Dods, Progress in Theology, 12. However, The Later Letters of Marcus Dods, D.D. (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1911) poignantly reveal a soul deeply injured by modern thought.
8
of Spirit in history, or simply pragmatic investigation of historical fact21—the
attempts by Scottish Presbyterians in this period to reckon with doctrine under
this rubric were also fraught with ambiguity.
Second, pace the assumption that Newman’s brilliant Essay provided
the touchstone and target for this tradition’s wrestling with the problem of
doctrinal development,22 my study locates the main interlocutor across the
North Sea in the Heilsgeschichte [salvation-history] theories and
Dogmengeschichten [histories of dogma] of German Protestant theology.
Admittedly, the religious historiography of Victorian Britain has preferred to
channel German theology into the emerging biblical criticism in Britain or
liberal movements like Broad Church Anglicanism.23 But once freed of
Barthian lenses, we can clearly see the many Scottish Presbyterians who
studied in Germany during this time with theologians of conservative repute
and note the voluminous translation of pious German theology by the FC-
connected T. & T. Clark publishing house.24 Throughout the Victorian era,
evangelical Germany was providing evangelical Scotland with constructive
resources for recasting and renewing doctrine through history.
Finally, if there was “no North Sea” after the mid-nineteenth century as
far as international evangelicalism was concerned (as Nicholas Railton
recently contended), then the North Atlantic should be considered similarly
21 G. P. Gooch, History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century, 3rd ed. (London: Longmans, 1928); Walter Nigg, Die Kirchengeschichtsschreibung: Grundzüge ihrer historischen Entwicklung (München: C. H. Beck, 1934); Hayden White, Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1973); Donald R. Kelley, Faces of History: Historical Inquiry from Herodotus to Herder (New Haven: Yale UP, 1998). An important work in church historiography that overlaps my study, albeit one limited to America, is Henry W. Bowden, Church History in the Age of Science: Historiographical Patterns in the United States, 1876-1918 (Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1971). 22 As in Toon, The Development of Doctrine in the Church. 23 E.g. Ieuan Ellis, “Schleiermacher in Britain,” SJT 33 (1981): 417-452; Robert Morgan, “Historical Criticism and Christology: England and Germany,” in England and Germany: Studies in Theological Diplomacy, ed. Stephen Sykes (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1982), 80-112; John Rogerson, Old Testament Criticism in the Nineteenth Century: England and Germany (London: SPCK, 1984). My hunch is that the general lines of this interpretation were set as early as Otto Pfleiderer’s The Development of Theology in Germany since Kant, and its Progress in Great Britain since 1825 (London: Sonnenschein, 1890). 24 I have documented this in “‘Landlouping Students of Divinity’: Scottish Presbyterians in German Theology Faculties, c. 1840 to 1914,” ZKG 121 (2010): 40-65. For T. & T. Clark’s importance see James Harvey, “The Publishing House of Messrs. T. & T. Clark, Edinburgh,” ET 51 (1939): 10-13.
9
shrunk.25 So even as this study generally moves within the small borders of
Scotland, it keeps worldwide English-speaking evangelical and Reformed
connections in peripheral view as churches in America and the Empire
struggled with the same problem.26
Presbyterians in Victorian Scotland wrestled with the problem of
history and doctrine not in the isolation of theological academia but in the
church—its pulpits, courts, and colleges. They were aware that if dogma did
historically develop, the fact of it would burst old beliefs about revelation,
Scripture, church, and confession. As such, discussion of doctrinal
development within this tradition usually took place in explicit connection
with matters of foundational theology. For this reason, the story starts not in
the nineteenth but rather in the sixteenth century: the old debate between
Protestants and Catholics over Scripture and tradition. The first chapter
explains how the very notion of doctrinal development that Newman tabled on
the agenda of Victorian theology in 1845 was at first resisted and rebuked by
Presbyterians as the latest chapter in Rome’s ongoing attempt to undermine
25 Nicholas Railton, No North Sea: The Anglo-German Evangelical Network in the Middle of the Nineteenth Century (Leiden: Brill, 2000). See especially Mark A. Noll, David Bebbington, and George Rawlyk, ed., Evangelicalism: Comparative Studies of Popular Protestantism in North America, the British Isles, and Beyond, 1700-1990 (New York: Oxford UP, 1994). Also useful in this regard are Marcel Pradervand, A Century of Service: A History of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, 1875-1975 (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1975), and Ian Randall and David Hilborn, One Body in Christ: A History of the Evangelical Alliance (Carlisle: Paternoster, 2001). 26 The Scottish Congregationalist A. M. Fairbairn (1838-1912), principal of Mansfield College, Oxford, wrote an important critique of Roman (including Newman’s) and Anglican theories of religious development in Catholicism: Roman and Anglican (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1899). In this regard see Adam Stewart, “John Henry Newman and Andrew Martin Fairbairn: Philosophical Scepticism and the Efficacy of Reason in The Contemporary Review Exchange,” forthcoming in Newman Studies Journal 7 (2010). The C of S’s William Hastie’s The Theology of the Reformed Church in its Fundamental Principles (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1904) was also an important contribution to the topic. Significant contributions by Americans include: W. G. T. Shedd, A History of Christian Doctrine, 2 vol. (1863; reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 1998); H. B. Smith, System of Christian Theology (New York: A. C. Armstrong and Son, 1884); Hugh M. Scott, Origin and Development of the Nicene Theology (Chicago: Chicago Seminary P, 1896); George Park Fisher, A History of Christian Doctrine (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1896); the multifarious contribution of Benjamin Warfield; Augustus H. Strong, Systematic Theology, 3 vol., rev. ed. (Philadelphia: Judson P, 1907). Relevant secondary literature includes: William Stoever, “Henry Boynton Smith and the German Theology of History,” USQR 24 (1968): 69-89; Henry W. Bowden, “W. G. T. Shedd and A. C. McGiffert on the Development of Dogma,” JPH 49 (1971): 246-265; James S. McClanahan, Jr., “Benjamin B. Warfield: Historian of Doctrine in Defence of Orthodoxy, 1881-1921,” (PhD diss., Union Theological Seminary in Virginia, 1988); Grant Wacker, Augustus H. Strong and the Dilemma of Historical Consciousness (1985; reprint, Macon: Mercer UP, 2005).
10
the sufficiency of Scripture to provide church doctrine. If the whole counsel of
God was contained in Scripture, as the Westminster Confession of Faith stated
(I. 6), what need was there to posit a supplementary source for doctrine in
revealed (oral) tradition—as in the old Catholic theory at Trent—or in a
developing tradition—as Newman’s novel theory posited?
Another Reformed foundation explored in this first chapter is
ecclesiology, particularly how the Protestant doctrine of the “visibility”’ of the
church bred what has been called “the divided mind of Protestantism about the
ecclesiastical past.”27 A sketch of Protestant church historiography and its
Dogmengeschichtsschreibung [writing of the history of theology or dogmas]
finds Protestants sometimes tracing the origins of evangelical doctrine back
through the darkness of the Middle Ages to the relative purity of the early
church, sometimes parachuting those doctrines directly over the history of the
lapsed church into the New Testament itself. Generally speaking, the tension
between a “reformed” or a “repristinated” church reflects a distinction
between the magisterial and pietistic streams of Protestantism. But it is
important to note that even for the former, the historical visibility of church
doctrine was sporadic at best, depending on how faithfully the church in any
given age cleaved to Scripture as the singular and sufficient source of doctrine.
The Protestant habit of mind—magisterial or pietistic—was to hear something
negative in the word “tradition” and to think the development of doctrine
could only be pathological.
As it were, nineteenth-century evangelical Presbyterians drew from
both streams. This tradition was thus highly vulnerable to the challenge of
doctrinal development. On one hand, it had an abiding concern for a
doctrinally precise expression of Christian faith—a sixteenth-century source
described the gathering of the Scottish church for worship as “convening to
doctrine.”28 On the other hand, its understanding of how the church was
historically visible in history was ill disposed to the concept of the historical
27 Kelley, Faces of History, 162. It is not difficult to see how the radical Protestant doctrine of justification by faith alone could damn church tradition as just another expression of an invidious synergism. See George Vandervelde, “Justification between Scripture and Tradition,” ERT 19 (1995): 128-148. 28 “1560-61 First Book of Discipline,” in Gordon Donaldson, Scottish Historical Documents (Edinburgh: Scottish Academic P, 1970), 130-31.
11
development of church and doctrines that confronted Presbyterians first in
Newman and then later in the German histories of dogma and doctrine.
And yet, when this chapter turns at last to look at relevant aspects of
the history of modern Scottish Presbyterianism, a few peculiar historical
circumstances come to light that should temper our surprise at finding Scottish
evangelicals at the frontline of this major theological conflagration. First, there
were long-standing political and ecclesial contacts between Scotland and the
Continent that would serve as bridges for various forms of conservative or
mediating German theology to penetrate Scotland and wean Presbyterians
away from their Biblicist ecclesiology and timeless confessions of faith to a
greater appreciation for church tradition and historical contextuality. It needs
to be remembered, second, that the modern alignment of social and political
conservatism with evangelical religion did not reflect Victorian reality. The
eminent intellectual historian Gertrude Himmelfarb has well described
Victorian evangelicalism as a “conservative revolution.”29 When even an
ironclad Calvinist like William Cunningham could endorse the “able and
consistent advocacy of liberal principles on ecclesiastical and political
matters,” could the doctrinal status quo remain untouched by the progressive,
ambitious, and questioning minds of this evangelical tradition?30
With this theological-historical foundation laid, the dissertation
proceeds chronologically. The second chapter analyzes and assesses the
response made by William Cunningham (1805-61) to Newman’s An Essay on
the Development of Doctrine. Newman’s theory of doctrinal development has
come to be universally acknowledged as a work for the ages, praised by no
less than the present Bishop of Rome as a decisive contribution to the renewal
of modern theology.31 But most nineteenth-century Christians, Catholic or
Protestant, found Newman to be a disturber of cherished theological
certainties. Cunningham, founding professor of church history at New
College, Edinburgh, and a classical Calvinist divine of no mean ability, 29 Himmelfarb, “The Victorian Ethos,” in Victorian Minds (London: Weldenfeld & Nicolson, 1968), 284. 30 William Cunningham, “The Errors of Romanism,” in Discussions on Church Principles: Popish, Erastian and Presbyterian (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1863), 2. 31 Presentation by his Eminence Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger on the First Centenary of the Death of Cardinal John Henry Newman (Rome, 28 April, 1990), http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/ documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_19900428_ratzinger-newman_en.html.
12
attacked Newman on grounds that would have been commonplace in the
seventeenth century, namely, the nature of revelation and the sufficiency of
Scripture. But was Cunningham tilting at windmills? Were the categories of
Reformed scholasticism at all appropriate to Newman’s paradigm-shifting
argument?
The stark Scripture or tradition shape of post-Reformation polemics as
maintained by Cunningham against Newman provided contours in which fresh
questions of the relation of doctrine to Scripture and, therefore, the historical
development of dogma would be set, and against which they would chafe.
This becomes explicit in the third chapter, which considers the thought of
Robert Rainy (1826-1906), a larger than life FC leader hailed in 1895 by
Gladstone as “unquestionably the greatest living Scotsman.”32 Rainy is best
remembered—and not always fondly33—for carefully sailing the FC through
the shoals of biblical criticism and confessional revision in the latter decades
of the century. However, he was also an able historian, and his Delivery and
Development of Christian Doctrine (1874) remains an important investigation
of the nature, genesis, and development of doctrine that discloses the ideals
behind this man of action. It is notable especially for the doctrinal and
confessional implications of his insistence on revelation in history. Rainy drew
upon a concept of Heilsgeschichte then current among some conservative
German theologians to argue that doctrine was not God’s truth deposited in the
church but rather the church’s interpretation of God’s mighty acts in history.
This was a tacit admission that doctrine, being historically conditioned, was
also historically conditional—although Rainy was quick to insist that the
clarity of revelation in history ensured the basic continuity of dogma and the
essential shape of the Presbyterians’ venerable Westminster Confession.
The tenor of the story changes sharply in the fourth chapter.
Alexander Balmain Bruce (1831-1899), FC pastor and professor of
apologetics and New Testament in Glasgow, bolted past Rainy’s cautious
affirmation of revelation in history. Bruce was listening attentively to the
clarion voice of late nineteenth-century Protestant theology: Albrecht Ritschl.
32 P. Carnegie Simpson, The Life of Principal Rainy, Vol. 2 (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1909), 163. 33 E.g. Alexander Stewart and J. K. Cameron, The Free Church of Scotland 1843-1910 (Edinburgh: The Knox P, 1910).
13
Already in The Humiliation of the Christ (1876) Bruce had agitated for
evangelical theology to rebuild from the ground up—the ground being the
historical evangel. His subsequent career as a Presbyterian provocateur finds
him eschewing “scholastic” dogmas of yesteryear to focus afresh on the Jesus
of history, and ripping down the “Church-woven veil” of old confessional
doctrines that was preventing his contemporaries “from seeing the true Christ”
revealed in the gospel testimonies.34 In arguing thus, Bruce essentially aligned
himself with the Ritschlian critique of catholic dogma as the intellectualization
of what had been a largely ethical Christian belief and the dogmatization of
what had been an inner, spiritual faith. And yet, despite burning bridges on his
way ‘back to Christ’, Bruce believed nevertheless that the fundamentals of
evangelical belief would be reaffirmed and strengthened by the historicizing of
doctrine—that is to say, the return to the Jesus of history.
James Orr’s deceptively simple case for the progress of dogma
occupies the fifth chapter. Orr (1844-1913), professor of church history at the
UP Divinity Hall in Edinburgh, then professor of systematic theology at the
UFC College in Glasgow, was an internationally respected theologian whose
corpus, seen in its entirety, was a fresh and forceful commendation of
orthodoxy to an age that seemed increasingly wary of traditional doctrine. A
key aspect of his defence of evangelical orthodoxy was the argument that, “so
far from the history of dogma being the fatuous, illusory thing that many
people suppose, there is a divine law and logic underlying its progress, a true
divine purpose leading and guiding in its developments…”35 We today might
find it somewhat incongruous that Orr utilized philosophical idealism to argue
that orthodoxy had developed as the rational unfolding of Spirit in history, but
such Hegelian-orthodox hybrids were common in conservative Protestant
thought of that era.36 Fascinating too is how both Bruce and Orr reflect the
remarkable doctrinal shift that occurred during the latter half of the century
whereby the incarnation supplanted the atonement as the fulcrum of
evangelical reflection. Both men sought to connect the humanness of the
34 A. B. Bruce “Theological Thought. The Historical Christ and Modern Christianity,” The Thinker 3 (1893): 31. 35 James Orr, The Progress of Dogma (1901; reprint, Vancouver: Regent College P, 2000), 9. 36 Jan Rohls, Philosophie und Theologie in Geschichte und Gegenwart (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2002), 489-90.
14
church to the humanity of Christ in such a way as to recast the issue of history
and doctrine Christologically. But which Christ? The “high” Christ of the
Chalcedonian dogma (Orr) or the “low” Christ of the synoptic gospels
(Bruce)? So then, theological pre-commitments like the doctrine of the
incarnation affected the shape of the category of the historical even as they
themselves were historicized.
A final chapter draws some conclusions about the problem of history
and doctrine for Scottish Presbyterians in the Victorian era. But Barth’s
warning has been taken to heart.
Anyone who is occupied today with the theology of the nineteenth century…needs to be warned not to suppose that he can settle it and be rid of it… An explicit judgement, the feeling that for better or worse we can be ‘finished’ with this or that, always means the closing of a door what ought to remain open, the silencing of a voice that ought to continue to speak, and that is not only to our detriment, but also to the detriment of the Church.37
Anyone who is occupied today with the churches of the Reformed tradition—
as the author of this dissertation is—is uncomfortably aware of the nineteenth-
century problem of history and dogma as unfinished business. Contemporary
Reformed Protestantism in the West is relentlessly negotiating its theological
inheritance with a violence that sunders churches. Even fundamental doctrines
are being restated or rejected amidst loud—and by no means compatible—
pleas for the church’s greater openness to modern thought and experience.38
Denominations are wracked by internecine warfare between ‘progressives’
and ‘traditionalists’.
What is profoundly troubling is that Reformed churches appear to lack
the means to adroitly negotiate their doctrinal inheritance—to be both
critically appreciative and properly suspicious of the role of church tradition in
the genesis of doctrine; to avoid idolizing their confessions of faith or ignoring
them; to root identity in past expressions of faith yet be relevant to their own
time and place; to be orthodox and modern. What is needed, simply put, is a
theory of doctrinal formation and development. But such a theory is possible
37 Karl Barth, Protestant Theology in the Nineteenth Century, trans. John Bowen (1959; reprint, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2002), 9. 38 The Assembly debates of worldwide Presbyterian churches are helpfully tracked at http://blog.gajunkie.com/.
15
only when the horizontal (i.e., the historical) dimension of the covenantal
relationship between God and humanity is taken with the utmost seriousness.
For reasons that shall be partially explained in the first chapter, amply
illustrated over the course of this study, and revisited in the conclusion, certain
deep-seated convictions on the nature of revelation, Scripture, soteriology, and
church have kept (and keep) the Reformed tradition from being, as Newman
put it, “deep in history.”39
“Reformed theology has gifts to bring to the church catholic,” stated a
noted ecumenist. “It has gifts to receive from it as well.”40 One such charism is
historical thinking. This gift can be critically received from the Catholic
Newman, or nineteenth-century German Lutherans, or perhaps even the
Victorian Presbyterians who feature in this study. It would be detrimental to
refuse to listen to past voices as they struggled—whether successfully or not—
to discern continuity in their doctrinal tradition without minimizing the fact of
historical disruption and change, and to maintain doctrinal integrity without
becoming redundant. So, without offering anything so ambitious as a
programmatic guideline for the development of doctrine in today’s Reformed
churches, by giving a forgotten period a new hearing, this study still hopes to
provide some ‘food for thought’ for the faithful formation and reformation of
doctrine in our contemporary context.41
Some brief notes on terminology are in order here, since several of the
key words in the theological vocabulary of this study do not carry univocal
meaning. Dogma, doctrine, creed, and confession are nuanced by church 39 Newman, An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, 6th ed., 8. 40 Gabriel Fackre, “Reformed Ecumenics,” Bulletin of the Institute for Reformed Theology 2 (2000): 1. 41 As such, it complements a small but growing number of recent studies by Protestants of the nature of doctrine. The defining modern study is George Lindbeck, The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1984). Surprisingly, most recent Protestant studies of doctrine come from the evangelical tradition: Harold O. J. Brown, Heresies: The Image of Christ in the Mirror of Heresy and Orthodoxy from the Apostles to the Present (New York: Doubleday, 1984); Alister E. McGrath, The Genesis of Doctrine: A Study in the Foundations of Doctrinal Criticism (Oxford: Blackwell, 1990); I. Howard Marshall, Beyond the Bible: Moving from Scripture to Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2004); Kevin Vanhoozer, The Drama of Doctrine: A Canonical-Linguistic Approach to Christian Theology (Louisville: WJK, 2005); Anthony Thistleton, The Hermeneutics of Doctrine (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007); Malcolm Yarnell, The Formation of Christian Doctrine (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2007).
16
affiliation (Orthodox, Catholic or Protestant); ancient, medieval, or modern
usage; and even language—e.g., the German word Bekenntnis covers both
creed and confession. While contemporary ecumenical concerns have
motivated theological discourse to distinguish the few venerable creeds of a
church catholic from the many confessions of a splintered Christendom, the
figures involved in this study reflect their own ecclesial time and place in
interchanging “creed” and “confession”. They also share in Protestantism’s
habitually imprecise use of the term dogma.42
Modern Roman Catholicism defines dogma very precisely: truths
directly contained in revelation—Scripture and tradition—or standing in
necessary connection to those truths, which have been determined by the
magisterium as necessary for Christians to believe.43 What is important to note
here is not only the indispensable role of the magisterium in defining dogma,
but also that dogmas are themselves part of the deposit of divine revelation
and, once defined, are irrevocable. Rome, as one her greatest modern sons,
Karl Rahner (1904-84), summarized, “understands her doctrinal decisions not
just as ‘theology’ but as the Word of faith—not indeed as newly revealed but
as the Word which utters Revelation itself truly and with binding force.”44
Protestants generally hold a dogma to be a doctrine, i.e., a teaching based on
the revelation recorded in the Bible, which a church considers to be a
fundamental belief and, therefore, urges it upon its members as necessary. The
emphasis falls on dogma as the church’s response to divine revelation rather
than as a part of the revelation itself. As such, magisterial Protestantism has
often correlated dogma with confessions of faith. While “dogma” is not part of
traditional Scottish Presbyterian parlance, their confessional doctrines should
be considered as equivalent.
42 Gerhard Kittel, “Dogma, dogmatizo,” in TDNT 2, 230-32; George Lindbeck, “Dogma,” in Dictionary of the Ecumenical Movement, ed. Nicholas Lossky et al. (Geneva: WCC, 1991), 305-307; Avery Dulles, “Dogma,” in Oxford Companion to Christian Thought, ed. Adrian Hastings (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2000), 173-175; Eilert Herms, “Dogma,” in RGG4 2, 895-99; idem, “Lehre, II. Systematish-theologish,” in RGG4 5, 201-205; Wilfried Härle, “Bekenntnis, IV. Systematisch,” in RGG4 1, 1257-62. 43 Catechism of the Catholic Church, 88, http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_INDEX.HTM; Decrees of the First Vatican Council, “On Faith and Reason,” 13 -14, http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Councils/ecum20.htm#Chapter%204.%20On%20faith%20and%20reason. 44 Karl Rahner, “The Development of Dogma,” in Theological Investigations, Vol. 1, trans. Cornelius Ernst (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1961), 46.
17
For all the Protestant vitriol directed against the Roman understanding
of dogma as mixing up what God says with what the church says, it must be
admitted—and this will become clear especially in the first and second
chapters—that certain Protestant views on the nature of revelation have tended
to conflate their doctrines with revelation, even if the formal distinction
between revelation in Scripture and doctrine is loudly professed. Moreover,
although Protestants have also criticized the Roman concept of dogma for
binding believers’ consciences to the church, when and where Protestant
confessions of faith have enjoyed civil sanction the end effect has not been
very different.
Protestants have written histories of dogma consistent with their loose
use of the term.45 Sometimes the history of theology, the history of doctrine,
and the history of dogma are interchangeable. Usually, however, the latter is
distinguished from the former two as handling the fundamental doctrines of a
given church tradition, even where it is admitted that those fundamentals or
dogmas might not be frozen or final. This ambiguity will be reflected in this
dissertation as Presbyterians in the nineteenth century rethought what was
truly central to the faith and what was peripheral.
Although some recent Protestant Dogmengeschichten second
Harnack’s limitation of dogma to the first centuries of the church—this time,
however, on ecumenical grounds46—the trend among historians is to de-
sacralize the concept of dogma for a social definition as an identity-defining
communal belief. This widens the field of the history of dogma to include
those Christian beliefs that have come to take on a sine non qua status within
some churches (e.g. episcopacy in Anglicanism, pacifism among Mennonites)
as well as entire traditions (e.g. Anabaptist, Charismatic) that have fallen
outside the scope of the conventional histories of dogma.47
45 Good overviews of recent Protestant histories of dogma are Bernhard Lohse, “Theorien der Dogmengeschichte im evangelischen Raum heute,” in Dogmengeschichte und katholische Theologie, ed. Werner Löser et al (Würzburg: Echter, 1985), 97-109, and Wolf-Dieter Hauschild “Dogmengeschichtsschreibung,” in TRE 9, 116-125. 46 Karlmann Beyschlag, Grundriss der Dogmengeschichte, Bd.1: Gott und Welt (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1987); Wolfgang A. Bienert, Dogmengeschichte (Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 1997). 47 See Ulrich Köpf, “Dogmengeschichte oder Theologiegeschichte?” ZThK 85 (1988): 455-473; idem, “Theologiegeschichte/ Theologiegeschichtsschreibung,” in RGG4 8, 315-322; Alister E. McGrath, “Dogma und Gemeinde: Zur sozialen Funktion des christlichen Dogmas,” KuD 37 (1991): 24-43.
18
Chapter 1
The Scottish Presbyterian Church “in” History
“The doctrine of what the church is, in one shape or other, has been the most
vexed one in the ecclesiastical history of Scotland.” - John MacLeod1 1.1. Introduction Dogma, maintained Karl Rahner, is “God’s truth heard, believed and
formulated in human, historically conditioned terms by man in this world.”2
And as the dazzling plenitude of historical reality—climate and geography,
culture and language, herd-mentality and personal idiosyncrasy, lex naturalis
and human freedom—affects how man in this world receives, confesses, and
transmits God’s truth, so too does it impinge on this present study of an
episode in the scholarly investigation of that truth’s historical reception and
course. The examination of the historical origins and development of doctrine
by Victorian-era evangelical Presbyterians simply cannot be comprehended
apart from its broad historical and ecclesial context. The theological minds
analysed in this study were steeped in a Reformed confessional tradition,
evangelical piety, and Scottish nationalism. Yet “God’s truth” was heard
differently over the clang of machinery in industrializing Scotland than in the
parish kirks of a more serene age; “God’s truth” was comprehended by minds
still skittish from 1789 and 1815, yet expanding from ideas fresh to their age;
“God’s truth” was being proclaimed in pulpits and from classroom lecterns by
free churchmen who were ambitious and hungry for recognition. Context
helps us to understand why, of all church traditions excepting Lutheranism, it
was evangelical Presbyterians in Scotland who took up most concertedly the
implications of historical reality for church doctrine, at the precise time when
they did so, and how their investigations were undertaken.
1 John MacLeod, Scottish Theology in Relation to Church History since the Reformation (Edinburgh: The Publications Committee of the Free Church of Scotland, 1943), 290. 2 Karl Rahner, “History of Dogma,” in Sacramentum Mundi, Vol. 2, ed. Karl Rahner (New York: Herder, 1968), 102.
19
In this chapter three points of reference will be established and
elaborated to provide context. The points are salient, not exhaustive. The first
pertains to how Scottish Presbyterians understood the relationship of Scripture
to tradition. For a Reformed church, this issue was not tangential to the
problem of doctrine and history but partially constitutive of it. The word
“development” entered the nineteenth century creaking under centuries of
accumulated Protestant-Catholic debate, the categories of which impaired the
initial evaluation of Newman’s An Essay on the Development of Doctrine and
German histories of doctrine. Second, what was the state of the formal study
of the history of doctrine when William Cunningham took up quill against
Newman, thereby initiating formally the issue as a problem for Presbyterians?
Of course, certain prerequisites to studying doctrine historically already
existed among Presbyterians: a frank admission of the church’s ability to err
and of the potential for discrepancy between Scripture and church tradition, as
well as the marshalling of patristic sources to buttress claims to catholic and
evangelical continuity were staples of Reformation and post-Reformation
polemics. But considered as a discipline, the historical investigation of
doctrines was an impertinent child of the continental Enlightenment. It had,
thus, a particular agenda and, upon permeation with a romantic historical
consciousness, carried unprecedented momentum when it penetrated Scottish
theology just before the mid-century mark. The third point of reference is a
sketch of relevant aspects of the churchly ethos of Scottish Presbyterianism,
inclusive of the tradition’s dogmatic heritage and philosophical proclivities, as
well as the eighteenth-century rise of an evangelical movement in the C of S
which begat the UP and the FC. This chapter, which weaves together the
Wirkungsgeschichte of the formative aspects of evangelical Presbyterianism in
Scotland with the eighteenth and nineteenth-century contingencies that
provoked the tradition to engage the historical “embeddedness” of the church
and its teachings, is impressionistic; it is hopefully not recklessly so.
1.2. Church, Scripture, and Tradition
It taxes the limits of sympathy to remove from our ecumenical climate
to the sometimes frigid, sometimes heated Protestant-Roman Catholic
relations of an earlier, fiercer age. Yet a regress to the sixteenth century must
20
be taken along one of the cracks in western Christendom, the relationship of
Scripture and tradition, even as contemporary Protestants and Catholics are
recognizing strengths in each other’s position.3 This issue commands attention
because it constitutes the original problem of the development of doctrine,
even if the notion of development was not what it would become when aerated
by the nineteenth-century rise of an historical consciousness.4 The relationship
of Scripture and tradition was hammered into unyielding shape by
Reformation and post-Reformation polemics; handed down to Presbyterians in
Victorian Scotland as part of their churchly birthright, it provided the lens
through which the “new” development of doctrine would be first assessed.
[1.2.1] Tony Lane has worked out a useful classification scheme for the
various positions interrelating Scripture, tradition, and church found within
church history.5 The “coincidence” view is exemplified by ante-Nicene
theologians like Irenaeus and Tertullian, who, against heretics’ appeals to
secret apostolic tradition and their maverick interpretations of apostolic
writings, insisted that the church possesses the full apostolic kerygma in its
Scriptures as authoritatively proclaimed by the apostles’ successors—the
bishops. Tradition in the sense of extra-scriptural revelation was the
prerogative of heretics.6 What was primarily an historical argument of the sub-
apostolic church—namely, that church teaching was in full agreement with the
apostolic writings being gathered into the New Testament—became a
theological axiom in the fifth century in Vincent of Lerins’ famous
formulation of the coincidence view. The Vincentian canon insisted that since
heretics too can quote the Bible, the church must determine the correct
interpretation of God’s word according to the consensus of the fathers: quod
ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus creditum est.7 This was a highly
3 For a survey of the field after the Second Vatican Council see Ellen Flesseman-Van Leer, “Present Day Frontiers in the Discussion about Tradition,” in Holy Book and Holy Tradition, ed. F. F. Bruce and E. G. Rupp (Manchester: Manchester UP, 1968), 154-170. 4 See Joachim Drumm, “Dogmenentwicklung,” in LThK3 3, 295-298. 5 A. N. S. Lane, “Scripture, Tradition and Church: An Historical Survey,” VE 9 (1975): 37-55. I prefer Lane’s scheme of coincidence/supplementary/ancillary to the widely used one of Heiko Oberman, “Tradition 1” vs. “Tradition 2”, which he developed in “Quo Vadis? Tradition from Irenaeus to Humani Generis,” SJT 16 (1963): 225-255. 6 Note that Lane, 41, distinguishes between doctrinal matters and ceremonial matters. 7 Oberman, “Quo Vadis? Tradition from Irenaeus to Humani Generis,” 227-29; Richard J. Bauckham, “Tradition in Relation to Scripture and Reason,” in Scripture, Tradition and
21
significant development. Not only must Scripture and church teaching
coincide, the former needed the latter to be understood.8
While the breakdown of the coincidence view is sometimes blamed on
late-medieval nominalism,9 Christian antiquity does disclose a
“supplementary” or two-source theory of the relation of Scripture to tradition,
indicating that the apostolic writings were not able to carry the whole weight
of the mushrooming lex credendi and lex orandi. Basil the Great’s treatise On
the Holy Spirit conjured up the “silent and mystical tradition” of the apostles
as an authority for various practices and beliefs not found in Scripture.10
Basil’s use of supplementary tradition worked its way into canon law, but it
was Augustine’s musings on the practical priority of church authority over
Scripture in the ordo salutis, and his habit of importuning extra-biblical
revelation to validate contemporary church practice that were perhaps of far
greater influence.11 Tradition as a supplementary second-source of revelation
came to plug the gaps between Scripture and church belief and practice.
Indeed, due to a lack of historical perspective the church became the de facto
source of tradition—i.e., what the church teaches or does must reach back to
apostolic times. The supplementary view came to be dominant, and was held
by the majority of the delegates at the Council of Trent (1545-63), and was
reaffirmed at the First Vatican Council.
Now this supernatural revelation, according to the belief of the universal church, as declared by the sacred council of Trent, is contained in written books and unwritten traditions, which were received by the apostles from the lips of Christ himself, or came to the apostles by the dictation of the Holy Spirit, and were passed on as it were from hand to hand until they reached us.12
Reason: Essays in Honour of R. P. C. Hanson, ed. Richard Bauckham and Benjamin Drewery (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1988), 120. 8 R. P. C. Hanson, Tradition in the Early Church (London: SCM, 1962) 105-8. 9 E.g. George H. Tavard, Holy Writ or Holy Church: The Crisis of the Protestant Reformation (1959; reprint, Westport: Greenwood, 1978), 22-43. 10 Basil, On the Holy Spirit, 27:67, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 8, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (1890; reprint, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1983). 11 Oberman, 234. 12 Decrees of the First Vatican Council, “On Revelation,” 5; http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Councils/ ecum20.htm#Chapter%202%20On%20revelation. Debate exists as to whether Trent allows a coincidence view even if the supplemental view came to dominant Tridentine Catholic theology. See Joachim Drumm, “Tradition, IV: Theologie- und dogmengeschichtlich,” in LThK3 10, 153-55.
22
Parrying Protestant attacks on prevailing Roman doctrines and
practices, Tridentine Catholic theology denied any discrepancy between
Catholic dogma and Scripture and affirmed Rome’s unbroken continuity with
the apostolic witness found in Scripture cum oral tradition.13 The position
taken at Trent thus obligated learned theologians to peer hard into the early
centuries of the church to find Tridentine Catholicism reflected there; their
counter-attacks forced opponents to peer equally hard into the intermittent
centuries for alibis to Protestant doctrines and practices. A two-source view of
Scripture and tradition could yield an effective—if historically superficial—
apologetic: the great bishop J.-B. Bossuet’s Historie des variations des églises
protestantes (1688) coaxed not a few into the Roman fold (including a young
Edward Gibbon) by exploiting Protestantism’s discordance as proof that its
variations equalled change ergo error, in sharp contrast to Rome’s upholding
semper eadem the traditions of the early church.14
[1.2.2] Building upon important medieval precursors, the Protestant
Reformers tended to an “ancillary” view of tradition to Scripture whereby
deference to tradition was no longer owed until earned by congruence with
God’s word.15 This stance is fittingly described as the “deparentifying” of the
church fathers and mother church.16 Contrary to the assumption by its foes
(and not a few of its friends), the sixteenth-century battle cry sola scriptura
did not seek to jettison church tradition. Rather, it demanded tradition be sifted
and judged by Scripture, the norma normans of belief and practice, divested of
its quasi-divine status, and put to work as a helpmate for the interpretation of
the Bible and the ordering of church life. Article 20 of the Scots Confession
(1560) declares:
As we do not rashly damn that which godly men, assembled together in General Councils, lawfully gathered, have approved unto us; so without just examination dare we not receive whatsoever is obtruded unto men, under the name of General Councils: for plain it is, that as
13 Wilhelm Dantine, “Das Dogma im tridentinischen Katholizismus,” in HDThG 2, ed. Carl Anderesen (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1980), 425-436. 14 Owen Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1987), 1-20. 15 Lane, 42-45. 16 Scott H. Hendrix, “Deparentifying the Fathers: The Reformers and Patristic Authority,” in Auctoritas Patrum: Zur Rezeption der Kirchenväter in 15. und 16. Jahrhundert, ed. Leif Grane et al. (Mainz: Philipp von Zorn, 1993), 55-68.
23
they were men, so have some of them manifestly erred, and that in matters of great weight and importance. So far then as the Council proveth the determination and commandment that it giveth by the plain word of God, so far do we reverence and embrace the same. But if men, under the name of a Council, pretend to forge unto us new articles of our faith, or to make constitutions repugning to the word of God, then utterly we must refuse the same as the doctrine of devils…17
Sixteenth and seventeenth-century Protestants were confident that their
“new” doctrines and teaching were really just the teachings of the fathers
dusted off from the accretions of the church’s Babylonian captivity.18 But it is
important to note (especially in future regard to how Victorian Presbyterians
assessed Newman) that Protestants not only rejected supplementary apostolic
tradition, they shattered the ecclesiology at the heart of the coincidence view.
“The essence of the coincidence view is the assumption not just that Scripture
and tradition have the same content but also that this content is found in the
teaching of the church,” explains Lane. “Unlike the coincidence view sola
scriptura did not involve the unqualified acceptance of any tradition or of the
teaching of any church and Scripture remained, formally as well as materially,
the ultimate criterion and norm.”19 According to Protestants, the coincidence
view threatened the Bible’s authority and sufficiency by making church
tradition its mediatrix. The true church, reminds the Scots Confession, “always
heareth and obeyeth the voice of her own Spouse and Pastor, but taketh not
upon her to be mistress over the same” (19). The supplementary view,
similarly, treated Scripture as deficient to convey the full knowledge of God
and his salvation, thereby making the church lean upon a foundation other
17 Reformed confessional documents are taken from www.creeds.net/reformed/creeds.htm. Compare to the 1577 Formula of Concord, 1: “We believe, teach, and confess that the sole rule and standard according to which all dogmas together with [all] teachers should be estimated and judged are the prophetic and apostolic Scriptures of the Old and of the New Testament alone….” Lutheran confessional documents are taken from www.bookofconcord.org. 18 Robert D. Preus, The Theology of Post-Reformation Lutheranism: A Study in Theological Prolegomena (Saint Louis: Concordia, 1970), 254-62, 303-4; Richard A. Muller, Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics: The Rise and Development of Reformed Orthodoxy, ca. 1520 to ca. 1725, Vol. 1. Prolegomena to Theology, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2003), 28-34, 50. 19 Lane, 43. See also Bauckham, 123. Oberman, 240-41, errs in thinking that Reformation theologians wanted to revive the coincidence view (“Tradition 1”), even as he rightly warns against uncritically swallowing Protestant rhetoric against wastrel tradition.
24
than God’s word for its life and doctrine.20 Thus, any statement or
interpretation of the church’s councils, doctors, or popes “repugn to the plain
word of God written in any other place of the Scripture” makes explicit that
the church’s teaching does not cohere with the Holy Spirit, the first and
greatest doctor ecclesiae (18).
[1.2.3] That Protestants variously assessed how much authority
catholicity, antiquity, and consensus should carry, and frankly admitted that
even the most crucial church councils were liable to mistakes, even “the purest
Churches under heaven…subject both to mixture and error” (Westminster
Confession, 25.5), did not entail that true doctrine was in any way
contaminated by history. Vera ecclesia ac religio sunt perpetua held for
sixteenth-century Protestants as for Roman Catholics—the difference was over
the norma normans.21 The line of debate drawn at the Reformation over, on
one hand, Scripture’s normative and intrinsic sufficiency and, on the other
hand, the historical and theological integrity of tradition, was subsequently
carved deeper. Luis de Molina (1535-1600) and Gabriel Vãzquez (1549-1604)
were among a school of Spanish Thomists who sought to mute Protestant
accusations of the corruption and change in church tradition through the
sophisticated utilization of a notion of logical development.22 Inferential
development, in which a necessary consequence implicated in or explicated
from revealed premises was deemed as certain as its premises, justified the
church’s role in declaring new dogma without threatening either a fixed
depositum fidei or the immutability of tradition.23 On the other hand, the Jesuit
20 On the lynchpin doctrine of Scripture’s sufficiency in classical Protestantism see Preus, The Theology of Post-Reformation Lutheranism, 309-15; Richard A. Muller, Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics: The Rise and Development of Reformed Orthodoxy, ca. 1520 to ca. 1725, Vol. 2. Holy Scripture (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2003), 310-22, 340-70; Gregg R. Allison, “The Protestant Doctrine of the Perspicuity of Scripture,” (PhD diss., Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 1995), 1-160. 21 Ekkehard Mühlenberg, “Das Argument: ‘Die Wahrheit erweist sich in Übereinstimmung mit den Vätern.’- Entstehung und Schlagkraft,” in Auctoritas Patrum II: Neue Beiträge zur Rezeption der Kirchenväter in 15. und 16. Jahrhundert, ed. Leif Grane et al. (Mainz: Philipp von Zorn, 1998), 153-169. 22 For analysis see Georg Söll, Dogma und Dogmenentwicklung, in Handbuch der Dogmengeschichte, Bd. 1: Fasz. 5, ed. Michael Schmaus et al. (Freiburg: Herder, 1971), §6; Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman, 21-48. 23 The First Vatican Council’s apparently blanket condemnation of doctrinal development should be understood as allowing the logical development of doctrine. See especially Decrees of the First Vatican Council, “On Faith and Reason,” 13-14.
25
Francisco de Suarez (1548-1617) was among the first to concede that the
scholastic notion of logical development was overstrained to account for the
genuinely new in the tradition’s history, or for doctrines that appeared to lack
revealed premises.24 Indeed, Tridentine Catholicism increasingly made the act
of church definition a proxy for an absent revealed premise or shortfall of
historical evidence in an occurrence of development. After Trent “something
new was implemented in a double sense,” suggested Wilhelm Dantine:
A progress of dogma was factually recognized (even if strife exists until today if it should and can be appraised as substantial or just accidental). Second, the church’s teaching authority plays the decisive role in this, and does so increasingly in a unique position of monopoly… Not only does ‘Mother Church’ have an absolute monopoly on the authentic interpretation of Scripture, as the trustee of apostolic tradition she authenticates new manifestations of revelation through the infallible Spirit’s aid.25
The tendency to logical—not historical—development of doctrine was
complemented by the church fathers’ plummeting reputation in the
seventeenth century. Ironically, the slide began in France where medieval
schoolmen had been habitually slighted for patristic studies. The polemic
between Protestants and Catholics (and also Jesuits and Jansenists) over who
“owned” the early church provoked an efflorescence of antiquarian historical
labour. French Benedictines of the St. Maur monastery, Jesuit Bollandists, and
the great Port Royal historian Louis de Tillemont (1637-98) collected
documents from libraries across Europe, prepared critical editions of the
fathers and more accurate chronologies of early church history, and purged the
Acta Sanctorum of legends and inaccuracies.26 Improved documentation
provided ready ammunition for Catholic apologists, proving that their
contested doctrines were embedded deeper in church history than Protestants
cared to admit; but by evidencing a far from homogenous early church,
appeals to the fathers became dangerous. With refined historical technique
showing that the early church fathers were often traitorous to Reformation
24 Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman, 41-48. 25 Dantine, “Das Dogma im tridentinischen Katholizismus,” 436. See the similar conclusion by Drumm, “Tradition,” 154. 26 Denys Hay, Annalists and Historians: Western Historiography from the Eighth to the Eighteenth Centuries (London: Methuen & Co., 1977), 159-162.
26
doctrines, many Protestant theologians recoiled to a more naked sola
Scriptura.27
Is this process detectable in the mid seventeenth-century Westminster
Confession of Faith, which became the pre-eminent Presbyterian confession
(see 1.4.2)? Drawn up by learned divines intimate with the fathers, the
schoolmen, and the reformers, the Confession nevertheless forwards a fairly
stark sola scriptura. In accord with many Reformed confessions, the locus of
Scripture as the principium cognoscendi is placed first, and the Bible’s
authority for doctrine and church polity is granted wider scope and application
than in other churches of the magisterial Reformation.28 This then seems to be
sharpened by the seventeenth-century Protestant adjustment to sola scriptura.
“Of the Holy Scripture”, the masterful first chapter of the Confession, exalts
Scripture as the singular source of redemptive truth, whose authority depends
solely upon the Spirit as its author and not ecclesiastical testimony (1:4). The
“whole counsel of God” is explicit in “or by good and necessary consequence
may be deduced from Scripture (1.6).” Nothing shall be added to revelation by
supplementary tradition or contemporary revelations of the Spirit because
nothing needs to be.29 As the traditions of the church, understood especially as
the great creed-making councils of the early church and Reformation era
synods, can and have erred (31:3), they may be of assistance in articulating the
rule of faith and practice but cannot stand as that rule. “The supreme judge by
which all controversies of religion are to be determined, and all decrees of
councils, opinions of ancient writers, doctrines of men, and private spirits, are
to be examined; and in whose sentence we are to rest; can be no other but the
Holy Spirit speaking in the Scripture” (1:10). Hence, a sharp disjuncture is
made between a sufficient, self-interpreting Bible and a besotted church
tradition (1.9). Such is the human proclivity to sin and such are the powers of
the church’s diabolical adversaries that the church’s visible continuity in
history is stretched thin, preserved only by the promise of God (25:4-5). 27 Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman, 74-83. Chadwick observes the effect was even stronger among latitudinarians, who disliked the fathers’ dogmatism and their credulity toward the miraculous. 28 Regarding Scripture’s practical scope note the contrast to the more conservative magisterial Reformation traditions in the Augsburg Confession, 15, and the Thirty-Nine Articles, 20. 29 This conviction still allowed for a sort of development of the church’s understanding of doctrines of Scripture, as will be examined in 2.5.
27
The Westminster Confession’s strong ancillary view of the relationship
of Scripture to tradition characterized subsequent Presbyterian theology. Pitted
against the supplementary view upheld in Tridentine Catholicism, a stalemate
ensued in the debate over Scripture and tradition that was, in fact, only
intensified by the subsequent rise of critical historical scholarship among
Protestants and developments within Catholicism that magnified papal
authority. Thus, nineteenth-century evangelical Presbyterians monitored
Roman Catholicism, feared it, even conceded the lure “majestic, abiding,
undeceivable power” of infallible authority and immutable tradition held for
their doubt-wracked age,30 but did not constructively engage Catholic
theology. Here we have a case of new wine into old wineskins: the venerable
debate between Protestants and Catholics over Scripture and tradition would
set the terms by which the new wine of Newman was first received, as well as
the more potent vintages of German origin, but would prove incommodious to
the historical consciousness applied to the church, revelation, and doctrine
which underlay such theories. Yet, might not the Ritschlian-inspired return to
the Jesus of history from a decadent dogmatic tradition among some late
nineteenth-century evangelical Presbyterians (chapter 4) witness to the
resilient legacy of this earlier debate? And finally, this debate guaranteed that
the notion of doctrinal development would never be of merely academic
interest for Presbyterians but, true to its Reformation-era roots, would
implicate an entire ecclesiology.
1.3. Church, Doctrine, and History
Glasgow FC College professor Thomas Lindsay’s 1875 address surely
startled students, many who would be avidly learning German, and droves of
whom would embark on study-semesters in Leipzig, Berlin, or Erlangen.
Because the university context of German theology estranged it from the
church, “Germany has well-nigh done all the work it can for theology in the
meantime,” he declared. He added: “Germany has failed in a sympathetic 30 E.g. “The Appeal of Romanism to Educated Protestants,” in History, Essays, Orations, and Other Documents of the Sixth General Conference of the Evangelical Alliance, Held in New York, October 2-12, 1873, ed. Philip Schaff and S. Irenaeus Prime (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1874), 449-66; W. G. Blaikie, “Revival of Romanism,” RARC 4 (1897): 176-78.
28
construction of the development of dogma, just because dogma stands in the
closest relation to the common life of the Christian Church or the Christian
people, and so cannot be sympathetically apprehended or cultivated apart from
that life.”31
Lindsay’s provocation (besides hinting at the clash-to-come in the
1920s between Barth and Harnack) sets up well the following sketch of
Theologiegeschichtsschreibung or Dogmengeschichtsschreibung. First,
Newman aside, the study of the history of doctrine was a German enterprise
until Scottish Presbyterians took up the task. As such, it initially suffered
opprobrium in a time when Britons tended “to smell rationalism in the dots
over the ü.”32 Second, Lindsay’s verdict makes explicit a challenge inherent in
approaching this subject. It would be misleading for me to sketch—as
Germans still do—the history of the discipline of the history of doctrine or
dogma.33 Dogmengeschichte may have been a self-standing discipline in
Germany since the Enlightenment, often pursued with abandon in a country
where confession was prescribed but university theology generally left
untrammelled, but it was not in Britain, nor was it an endeavour of pure
Wissenschaft. Scottish Presbyterians were, of course, affected by the
challenges to Christianity and changing intellectual patterns that drove the
German study of the history of doctrine, but their wrestling with the subject
matter was typically mediated through the church not the academy, and
consequently bore a highly practical rather than theoretical tone. It was stirred
by things like confessional revision and reflection on the mission of the church
in a secularizing society, or was an ad hoc response to a specific challenge to
traditional positions. 31 T. M. Lindsay, “The Study of Church History [1875],” in College Addresses and Sermons (Glasgow: James Maclehose and Sons, 1915), 85. 32 Georgina Max Müller, The Life and Letters of the Right Honourable Friedrich Max Müller, Vol. 1 (London: Longmans, Green, & Co., 1902), 241. F. Max Müller made this remark in 1860. Ulrich Köpf, “Dogmengeschichte oder Theologiegeschichte?” KD 85 (1988): 455, remarks: “One would not be saying too much to maintain that through the whole nineteenth century, and even well into the twentieth century, Dogmengeschichte was a German and Protestant affair.” 33 A format followed by the overviews I am using: F. W. Kantzenbach, Evangelium und Dogma: die Bewältigung des theologischen Problems der Dogmengeschichte Protestantismus (Stuttgart: Evangelisches Verlagswerk, 1959) [hereafter abbreviated as ED]; Gerhard May, “Dogmengeschichte/ Dogmengeschichtsschreibung,” RGG4 2, 915-920; W.-D. Hauschild, “Dogmengeschichtsschreibung,” TRE 9, 116-125; Joachim Drumm, “Dogmengeschichte, Dogmengeschichtsschreibung,” in LThK3 3, 298-301; less so Ulrich Köpf, “Theologiegeschichte/ Theologiegeschichtsschreibung,” RGG4 8, 315-322.
29
For my purposes, then, the path that the critical, historical study of
church doctrine took up until it broached British divinity around mid-century
should be viewed as an assemblage of factors rather than as a chronicle of an
emerging Wissenschaft, although there is, of course, overlap. As in the
preceding section, the ecclesial location of the topic is of the utmost
significance, despite being given often only glancing attention in typical
surveys.
[1.3.1] Scholars date the origins of the historical accounting of church
doctrine from the Enlightenment, when something like a distinct discipline of
the history of doctrine or dogma arose, with a token nod back to the
Reformation. To assume a tacit recognition of historicity as an essential
ingredient to the study of the history of the normative beliefs of the church is
to slight pre-Reformation church history since, then, the church’s doctrine was
like its Lord: the same yesterday, today, and forever.34 Even the Reformation
was an unwitting watershed for considering church and doctrine within the
bounds of history. The flurry of creeds and confessions from this era leave no
doubt that the Reformers and their scions pursued a purified dogmatic
Christianity, including, in contrast to the medieval church, a steep expectation
of a fides explicita among the faithful. Further, the Reformers’ push ad fontes
of the early church and Scripture betrays a historically “closed” worldview
where authority lay in a past golden age and historical existence was flattened
into universal types.35 Roman Catholics and Protestants both claimed to
34 See Jaroslav Pelikan, Historical Theology: Continuity and Change in Christian Doctrine (London: Hutchison and Co., 1971), 1-32; Karlmann Beyschlag, Grundriss der Dogmengeschichte, Bd. 1 (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1987), 1-4; Wolfgang Bienert, Dogmengeschichte (Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 1997), 11-14. Recognition of the historical transmission of doctrine can be found in the early church (as in Irenaeus’ view of episcopal succession) as can allowance for incremental progress in the understanding of church teaching through a dialectic of truth and error or the exegetical teasing out of allegorical meaning. But in the early church, only heresy was historical. Even the “history of heretics” [Ketzergeschichte], as F. C. Baur described early Christian historiography, typically flattened all heresies to variations of an original abomination. When changes or gaps in past church teaching were detected—as they often were during the Middle Ages—solutions were found outside history: past thinkers were either made accountable to current orthodoxy or, as in Abelard’s sally against the ubi, semper, and omni of the Vincentian canon in his Sic et Non, the issue was made to be logical contradiction not historical change. 35 Eckehart Stöve, “Zeitliche Differenzierung und Geschichtsbewußtein in der neuzeitlichen Historiographie,” in Geschichtsbewußtsein und Rationalität: Zum Problem der Geschichtlichkeit in der Theoriebildung, ed. Enno Rudolph and Eckehart Stöve (Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1982), 16-17.
30
maintain apostolic teaching in unbroken continuity with the consensus patrum
et doctorum. The Reformers loosened the historical spirit for polemical
purposes—but this spirit, as Jaroslav Pelikan wryly noted, remained to lay
waste the polemics of both sides.36 This loosening first hastened a refinement
in historical method and, second, wrung out of theologians a concession of the
church’s historicity.
The deployment of historical “proofs” to show that Roman or
Reformed beliefs did (not) correspond with the early church inadvertently
spurred on historical scholarship: university chairs in controversial, i.e.
historical, theology were erected, patristic sourcebooks assembled, and a
sketch of historical pedigree was made requisite to any treatment of a
dogmatic locus. Of greater importance, however, was the refinement and
standardization of method in partial reaction to the lacuna caused by the
Reformation’s unsettling of churchly authority and former religious
certainties. The rise of empirical science, the repression of religious liberties
by absolutist Catholic monarchies subsequent to the Thirty-Years War, a
rapidly expanding world map which undermined the contours of the traditional
worldview all played a role in making Protestants, especially, suspicious of
assertions of certitude which rested on bare ecclesial or dogmatic authority.37
In the pursuit of a universal religion and morality whose grounds were not
subject to church autocracy nor encumbered by sophistic dogmas, English
deists sifted Bible and church teaching through the sieve of human reason,
often progressing from an attempt to harmonize revelation with reason to
doubting outright the very necessity of revelation for a rational religion.38 The
recrudescence of scepticism toward traditional authorities threatened claims to
historical reliability, profane and sacred—Descartes belittled history for its
inability to guarantee self-evident truth—and compelled methodological
reflection on the historical craft to counter such criticism.
36 Pelikan, Historical Theology, xxi. 37 Margaret Jacob, “The Enlightenment Critique of Christianity,” in The Cambridge History of Christianity, Vol. 7: Enlightenment, Reawakening and Revolution 1600-1815, ed. Stewart J. Brown and Timothy Tackett (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006), 265-67. 38 Brian A. Gerrish, “Natural and Revealed Religion,” in The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Philosophy, Vol. 2, ed. Knud Haakonssen (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006), 641-52.
31
As a result, here in the seventeenth century critical, impartial analysis
of sources, proper documentation, and cautious, probabilistic judgement find
their canonization. The remarkable effusion of antiquarian history among the
monks in St. Maur and the Bollandists exemplified this trend (see 1.2.3).
Concern to establish the reliability of human testimony and the possibility of
an historical epistemology in reaction to seventeenth-century scepticism was
taken into the Enlightenment: David Hume and Edward Gibbon are sterling
examples of such critical history, where questions of testimony and reliability
according to universal norms are prominent.39
Further, even if the Reformers believed that true doctrine floated above
historical change, they conceded that the church did not. It was tainted.
Luther’s famous bonfire of medieval canon law in 1520 expressed his
conviction that the apostolic testimony maintained by the early church had
been polluted by mere human teaching over the course of the church’s history.
A student of Robert Rainy recalled a facetious quip made during church
history class that according to the Reformation view of church history
“everything started off well until ‘the Devil shot in rubbish’.”40 Indeed, an
ancillary view of Scripture and tradition is inextricably bound up with a “fall”
theory of church history: the church lapsed from original purity at the point
(according to the rather quivery line drawn by early Protestants) when the
papacy’s ascendancy was undeniable. The result was an ecclesiastical
historiography that, while affirming of its most ancient past, had to cobble
together evangelical continuity from among Christ’s persecuted disciples who
lurked in the shadows of medieval Catholicism.
A concession of the church’s historicity was the sine non qua of the
historicizing of church doctrine. At the same time that deists were whittling
away the dogmatic husk of Christianity by extracting universal truths of
reason and morality from its corrupted historical manifestations, a challenge
arose in Germany of similar effect. Pietism, a movement of renewal within
Lutheranism, blamed the church’s spiritual stagnation on its surfeit of
39 See Dario Perinetti, “Philosophical Reflection on History,” in The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Philosophy, 2: 1108-17. See also W. H. C. Frend, “Historians Remembered: Edward Gibbon (1737-1794) and Early Christianity,” JEH 45 (1994): 661-672. 40 Robert Mackintosh, Principal Rainy: A Biographical Study (London: Andrew Melrose, 1907), 72.
32
doctrine.41 The institutional, dogmatic churches of the magisterial
Reformation, charged pietists, were not in continuity with early charismatic
Christian communities. Gottfried Arnold’s learned Unparteiische Kirchen-
und Ketzer Geschichte von Anfang des Neuen Testament bis auf das Jahr
Christi 1688 (1699-1700) pushed the church’s fall back behind Chalcedon and
Nicaea, and held out Christ’s simple message of faith and love as still awaiting
rediscovery by Catholic and Protestant alike.42 Pietism de-idolized the
Reformation and the static Augustinian amillennialism that lay behind the
ecclesiology of western Christianity. From the Bible it derived an
eschatological Heilsgeschichte that found reflection in the pilgrim’s progress
of believer and church—individual sanctification and the growth of God’s
kingdom on earth should be considered as the first stirrings of a concept of
organic historical development.43 In Pietism, the church was an historical
wayfarer somewhere in the wilderness between the pure church of the New
Testament and the future triumph of God’s kingdom. This forward-looking
view of history was bequeathed to Enlightenment views of secular progress as
well as Pietism’s immediate theological heirs, evangelicalism and the early
nineteenth-century Awakening [Erweckungsbewegung] on the Continent, as
was its stance toward classical Christian doctrine.44 Both will obviously
require attention later in my study.
[1.3.2] The origins and rise of the study of the history of doctrine is,
therefore, inconceivable apart from the confluence of refined historiographical
canons and the positing of a disjuncture between doctrine and religion by
orthodoxy’s malcontents, pietist or deist. Two consummate examples of this
confluence in the German Enlightenment are the Göttingen historian J. L.
Mosheim (1694/5-1755) and the neologist Halle professor J. S. Semler (1725-
41 For a succinct treatment of Pietism see Johannes Wallmann and J. S. O’Malley, “Pietismus, I. Kirchengeschichtlich,” in RGG4 6: 1341-49. 42 Walter Nigg, Die Kirchengeschichtsscheibung: Grundzüge ihrer historischen Entwicklung (München: C. H. Beck, 1934), 75-76. See also Franklin H. Littel, The Anabaptist View of the Church: A Study in the Origins of Sectarian Protestantism (1958; reprint, Paris, AR: The Baptist Standard Bearer, 2001), 57-78. 43 See the brilliant article by F. W. Kantzenbach, “Vom Lebensgedanken zum Entwicklungsgedanken in der Theologie der Neuzeit,” in Geist und Religion der Neuzeit, Bd. 2 (Saarbrücken: Dadder, 1991), 57-90. 44 Wolfhart Pannenberg, “Geschichte/Geschichtsschreibung/Geschichtsphilosophie VIII. Systematisch-Theologie,” TRE 12, 660-666.
33
91). The temperately orthodox Mosheim is often regarded as the father of
modern church history because he set it apart as a distinct field of study, and
because his Institutiones historiae ecclesiasticae antiquioris et recentioris
quickly established itself as definitive.45 Mosheim’s masterpiece proceeded by
way of what was then called the “pragmatic” method, seeking to “connect
each event with the causes from which it proceeds, and the instruments which
have been concerned with its production” according to standards of natural
reason and without recourse to divine interventions (1:10). Despite a claim to
supra-confessional impartiality, his theological position is explicit:
Christianity is commended in the beautiful simplicity of its religion, and its
history reconstructed not according to dogmatic authority but the authority of
the sources (1:13).
Semler, a pioneer in the historical criticism of the Bible, famously
made a distinction between the word of God and the Bible as its rough vessel
clearly indebted to dichotomies of letter and spirit, doctrine and religion, from
a pietist upbringing he never quite shook off, and which he later applied to the
study of church doctrine.46 Semler countered the flippant dispensing of
revelation by rationalists with a notion of progressive, historical revelation.
Free scrutiny of the historical contexts of divine accommodation allows the
recovery of the gospel from its conditioned forms, be it Bible, creed, or
confession. Here is pietism with an edge: highlighting the divergence between
Scripture and dogma, and then the historical variability of dogma and doctrine,
allowed withering criticism of restrictive church doctrine while leaving
Christ’s religion unscathed and the fact of historical revelation vindicated.
Enlightened Christians like Mosheim and Semler were typically
seeking a via media between implacable orthodoxy and radical, revelation-
denying criticism in such a way that ecclesiastical and theological authority
45 J. L. Mosheim, An Ecclesiastical History, Ancient and Modern, 2 vol., trans. Archibald Maclaine (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1871). Mosheim was recommended in the Proposal for the Foundation and Formation of Libraries in the Manses of the Free Church of Scotland; with a Catalogue of Books, Revised and Recommended by the The Rev. W. Cunningham, D.D., Principal, and The Rev. J. Buchanan, D.D., Professor of Theology, New College, Edinburgh (Edinburgh: Neill and Company, 1849), a ‘best books’ list intended for circulation among congregations to elicit gifts of books FC ministers could otherwise not afford on their stipends. 46 I am drawing upon Friederike Nüssel, “Semler, Johann Salamo,” RGG4 8, 1204-1205, and Colin Brown, Jesus in European Protestant Thought, 1778-1860 (1985; reprint Grand Rapids: Baker, 1988), 10-16 [hereafter abbreviated as Jesus].
34
was swapped for a procedure of historical verification.47 But this defence of
Christianity and the factuality and necessity of revelation against base
rationalism worked as a solvent on traditional church doctrine. “The study of
the history of dogmas has its particular and strongest impulse in an anti-
dogmatic tendency… All history of dogmas research has to deal with this anti-
dogmatic tendency, and it is an open question if that tendency does not yet
keep the upper hand.”48 An emancipatory trajectory runs from neologism—
itself heir to a critical posture toward doctrine and a notion of historical
progress found in both deism and pietism—through Lessing and Kant to
Harnack and the neo-Kantian critics of traditional Christianity. It can be
summed up in David Strauss’ famous claim that “the true critic of dogma is its
own history.”49 Hard-nosed historical analysis of cause and effect and the
changes incurred through environment and time, against the backdrop of a
developmental philosophy of history that awaited a future consummation of
truth, would liquidate church doctrine so as to free Christ’s religion.
This point must be belaboured because it set the tone for how
nineteenth-century Britain first encountered the field of study. Manifestations
of this critical stance to church doctrine and a profane approach to the history
of Christianity—related, of course, to its similar effects on the study of
Scripture—raised the hackles of British Protestants against “infidel” German
theology in the first decades of the nineteenth century and prejudiced them
against the study of the history of doctrine.50 In fact, British Christians
typically lost the subtle distinction between German rationalism and
47 See M. A Lipps, Dogmengeschichte als Dogmenkritik: Die Anfänge der Dogmengeschichtsschreibung in der Zeit der Spätaufklärung (Bern: Peter Lang, 1983). 48 Karl-Gerhard Steck, “Dogma und Dogmengeschichte in der Theologie des 19. Jahrhunderts,” in Das Erbe des 19. Jahrhunderts, ed. Wilhelm Schneemelcher (Berlin: Alfred Töpelmann, 1960), 27-28. 49 D. F. Strauss, Die christliche Glaubenslehre, Bd. 1 (1840), 70. Cited by Kantzenbach, 185. 50 By no means was this limited to theology, as the unsettling effects in Britain of German classical scholarship indicate. See Norman Vance, “Niebuhr in England,” in British and German Historiography 1750-1950, ed. Benedikt Stucktey and Peter Wende (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2000), 83-99. For the early reception of German theology into Victorian Britain see Ieuan Ellis, “Schleiermacher in Britain.” SJT 33 (1981): 417-452; Peter C. Erb, “Pietism and Tractarian Oxford. Edward Bouverie Pusey, Evangelicalism and the Interpretation of German Theology,” in Rezeption und Reform, ed. Wolfgang Breul-Kunkel and Lothar Vogel (Darmstadt und Kassel: Verlag der Hessichen Kirchengeschichtlichen Vereinigung, 1993), 399-412.
35
neologism.51 Yet, it was not the sole path the study of the history of doctrine
took in the nineteenth century.52 Only the existence of a second trajectory
makes comprehensible how and why evangelical Presbyterians could
overcome initial antipathy to constructively engage the problem of the
historical origins and development of doctrine.
[1.3.3] The concept of history inherent in romanticism and idealism
permitted a re-founding of the history of doctrine as a positive theological
science. It did so by breaking the habit of mind spanning Christian antiquity to
the Enlightenment that considered truth as in the world but not of the world. It
is axiomatic that one of romanticism’s chief traits was the central place
accorded to history.53 The Enlightenment fascination with meta-history was
retained but transformed. Rejected: models of simple linear progress, quasi-
mechanical laws of development, and the tendency to treat history as a mere
vestibule for truth.54 History is an encompassing organism, each moment of
which is intrinsically valuable, the free evolution of which incites awe not
quantification—“that class of cause-and-effect speculators,” crowed Thomas
Carlyle in the 1830s, “have well nigh played their part in European culture”—
the interpretation of which demands empathy not haughty judgement. 55 If
there was a “law” of history according to the romantics, as a slightly befuddled
reviewer in the FC-influenced North British Review noted in 1854, it “is that
there can be no life without free development.”56 The God who cranked
history’s engine, then left it to its own momentum was also rejected. God was
not a static substance but the living presence filling all things as infinite source
51 Owen Chadwick, The Victorian Church, Vol. 1 (London: Adam & Charles Black, 1966), 530. 52 Friedrich Mildenberger, Geschichte der deutschen evangelischen Theologie in 19. und 20. Jahrhundert (Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 1981), §7, suggested to me a twofold track of the study of the history of doctrine. 53 B. M. G. Reardon, “Romanticism,” in The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Modern Christian Thought, ed. Alister E. McGrath (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993), 573-579. A good account of nineteenth-century historiography is Donald Kelley, Fortunes of History: Historical Inquiry from Herder to Huizinga (New Haven: Yale UP, 2003); a classic account is Georg G. Iggers, The German Conception of History (Middletown: Wesleyan UP, 1968). 54 Stöve, “Zeitliche Differenzierung und Geschichtsbewußtein in der neuzeitlichen Historiographie,” 30-37. 55 Thomas Carlyle, “On History,” in Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, Vol. I (Boston: n.p., 1866), 222. 56 [Anonymous] “Review: Hippolytus and His Age, by C. C. J. Bunsen, 4 Vol. London, 1852,” North British Review 19 (1853): 49.
36
and power. In the romantic view of reality as a totality [romantische
Totalitätsanschauung] God and world history cohered as the incarnation of
Spirit.57 Wilhelm Maurer found a profound “incarnationalism” at the centre of
the romantic view of history: “the incarnation of God—not as a one-time act,
rather as an underlying event—is the meaning of history. That it happened
once in Christ is only a typical case.” As such, God’s creating and redeeming
word could only be heard within “the sound of running history,” as George
Adam Smith (1856-1942), the eminent UFC Old Testament scholar, put it.58
Even though Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834) never wrote
church history, the stimulus he gave to the historical study of the church
should not be underestimated. In consummate romantic fashion,
Schleiermacher charged the church to “know thyself”, a task that entailed
retrospection and introspection of the church as a particular woven into the
whole fabric of reality. From his early Speeches on Religion to his mature and
more explicitly church-oriented The Christian Faith, where the church’s
historical existence is an extension of the divine life, history is a hierophant.
Clear application of Schleiermacher’s orientation to history is perhaps seen
best in the programmatic Brief Study of the Outline of Theology, where
exegesis, church history, and dogmatics are all handled under the rubric of
historical theology, i.e. the critical examination of the church’s past and
present faith with an eye to the articulation of the church’s living faith.59
Church doctrines were particular to their own context yet knit to the past
through the agency of the Spirit, for the church received revelation not as a
deposit but in the historical continuum of the presence of Christ himself.
Clinging to antiquated doctrines asphyxiates Christ’s Spirit.60 Indeed,
Schleiermacher considered the study of the history of doctrines to be an
57 Wilhelm Maurer, “Das Prinzip des Organischen in der evangelischen Kirchengeschichtsschreibung des 19. Jahrhunderts,” KD 8 (1962): 265. 58 The phrase is often cited in Iain D. Campbell, Fixing the Indemnity: The Life and Work of Sir George Adam Smith (1856-1942) (Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2004). 59 Friedrich Schleiermacher, Brief Outline of the Study of Theology, trans. W. Farrar (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1850), 26-27. Richard Crouter, “Shaping an Academic Discipline: The Brief Outline of the Study of Theology,” in Cambridge Companion to Friedrich Schleiermacher, ed. Jacqueline Mariña (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2005), 111-128, is a very helpful assessment. See also Maurer, “Das Prinzip des Organischen,” 266-271. 60 Schleiermacher, Brief Outline, 205.
37
avowedly Protestant enterprise, since they alone took seriously the fact of
historical flux.61
On many counts, Schleiermacher would have been a strong draught for
evangelical Calvinists to swallow had he not been diluted. Philip Schaff
(1819-93), perhaps the greatest promoter in America of this “liberal
evangelicalism” or “mediating theology”,62 lauded “the immortal name of
Schleiermacher” whose “near approach to a truly evangelical theology”
animated an entire generation of theologians to root more deeply his Christ-
centred, church-serving programme in the Bible and the catholic and
evangelical confessions.63 Schleiermacher was mediated in two ways relevant
to my study, both of which will receive elaboration in later chapters.
The first pertains to Schleiermacher’s understanding of the church as
an historical organism sharing in the life of Christ. Of exceeding importance
was a Hamburg Jew, J. A. Neander (1789-1850), who converted to
Christianity under Schleiermacher’s aegis, joined him in 1813 on the faculty at
the University of Berlin, and thereafter established himself as the premier
church historian of his time.64 Pectus est quod theologum facit, Neander’s
motto and key for unlocking the history of Christ’s kingdom, indicates his
affinities both with his great colleague and the Awakening in Germany.65
Because Neander focused attention on individuals who leaned their hearts
upon the redeemer, his historiography was amenable to evangelicals; at the
same time he rejected a “fall theory” through an organic and incarnational
concept of the historical development of the church. He welcomed back into
the fold of the church all who looked to Christ as their saviour—popes, ante-
Nicene heretics, medieval monks—as links in the continuous growth of
61 The remark is found in Martin Cordes, “Der Brief Schleiermachers an Jacobi,” ZThK 68 (1971): 195-212. 62 On Schaff’s mediating program, see especially Gesine von Kloeden, “Philip Schaff- Vermittler zwischen den Welten,” in Reformierte Retrospektiven, ed. Harm Klueting and Jan Rohls (Wuppertal: Foedus, 2001), 219-29; Klaus Penzel, “Philip Schaff: A Centennial Appraisal,” CH 59 (1990): 207-221. 63 Philip Schaff, Germany; its Universities, Theologians, and Religion (Philadelphia: Lindsay and Blakiston, 1857), 154-57. Such a sentiment can be found in many of his works. 64 Joachim Mehlhausen, “Neander, Johann August Wilhelm (1789-1850),” TRE 24, 238-42. Born David Mendel, Neander (“new man”) became his name at baptism. He was esteemed for his methodological rigour but especially because he recaptured church history as a theological discipline from cool pragmatists like Mosheim. 65 August Neander, General History of the Christian Religion and Church, Vol. 1, trans. A. J. W. Morrison (London: H. G. Bohn, 1850), viii.
38
Christ’s kingdom. All Christian history was commentary on Christ’s parables
of the mustard seed and the leaven: slow, inexorable, unpredictable growth of
the gospel in history as the power of Christ himself, which must “purify,
enlighten, reanimate...all which is not born of the Spirit.”66 Sharing in the
divine-human life of its founder, the church leavens the world as the presence
of God, overcoming the opposition between humanity and divinity, grace and
nature.67
Schleiermacher’s vision of the organic historical development of the
church and its doctrines through the enlivening life of Christ in it was
effectively “evangelicalized” by Neander. International students of evangelical
persuasion, among them the American Presbyterian Charles Hodge and John
Cairns, the future leader of the UP, sought out Neander as a “safe” (though by
no means beyond criticism) point of access to German divinity.68 Neander was
not only the most widely read church historian in nineteenth-century
Germany, he was recommended reading for FC students.69
Second, Schleiermacher’s focus on the experience of faith shifted the
ground and source of doctrine away from past revelation to the present church.
Dogma or doctrine described the church’s faith. This too was not easy for
evangelical Presbyterians to surmount: if his conception of the church as
Christ’s historical existence dangerously suggested ecclesiastical apotheosis,
this second aspect seemed to be historically relativizing.70 Yet it too was made
palatable via mediation and put at the disposal of more traditional expressions
of theology, such as by the so-called Mediating school [Vermittlungstheologie]
66 Neander, Light in the Dark Places: Or, Memorials of Christian Life in the Middle Ages, trans. J. McClintock (New York: Lane & Scott, 1851), 152. 67 Neander, General History, 1: 5. 68 E.g. John Cairns, Principal Cairns (London: Oliphant Anderson, 1903), 56-57; A. R. MacEwen, Life and Letters of John Cairns (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1895), 155-58; H. C. Alexander, Life of Joseph Addison Alexander (New York: Charles Scribner, 1870), 1:323-37; A. A. Hodge, The Life of Charles Hodge, (New York: Charles Scribner, 1880), 164-66, 181-84. 69 See the Proposal for the Foundation and Formation of Libraries in the Manses of the FC of Scotland. Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, 3rd ed. (1890; reprint, Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 2002) 1:37, notes Neander’s extremely wide circulation among evangelical Protestants. 70 Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, Vol. 1/ Part 1, trans. G. W. Bromiley (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1975), 257-60, likens this “fatal doctrine of the spirit of the Christian community” to the Roman teaching office: both divinized the church and muzzled the free Word of God. An illuminating study is Alasdair Heron, “Barth, Schleiermacher and the Task of Dogmatics,” in Theology Beyond Christendom, ed. John Thompson (Allison Park, PA: Pickwick, 1986), 267-284.
39
and the conservative neo-Lutheran party.71 The Zürich mediating theologian
Alexander Schweizer (1808-88) provides a good example of the turn from an
objective dogmatics to a Glaubenslehre—literally, “the doctrine of faith”—
whereby doctrines are depicted through the experience of faith.72 Schweizer’s
Die Glaubenslehre der evangelisch-reformierten Kirche (2 Vol. 1844-47)
unfolds doctrines from the root consciousness of utter dependence upon God.
Yet, as chapter 3 in particular will document further, mediating
theologians and neo-Lutherans, in accord with the nineteenth-century turn to
the subject, often started from “below”, that is, from the historical experience
of faith, but sought an objective and normative form of doctrine in its
developmental apogee in the classical creeds and Reformation confessions.
That this conservative mediation combined traditional attachment to
confession and Bible with a pietistic yet very modern attention to the believing
subject rendered it intelligible to and important for evangelical Presbyterian
thinking about the historical nature of doctrine, as well as seeming to waylay
some of history’s more bumptious claims.
The philosophy of absolute idealism was also a mediated stimulus for
nineteenth-century Presbyterianism’s awakening to the historical nature of
church doctrine. While romanticism and idealism shared much in common,
theologians and historians indebted to idealism were uncomfortable with the
Schleiermacherian school’s treatment of doctrine as exterior to the religion of
the heart, and with the romantic hesitancy of historians like Neander to impose
order on the chaos of historical plenitude. On the contrary, History may be a
free development but freedom takes concrete form as Absolute Spirit, and that
Spirit is Mind.73 F. C. Baur held Neander in the highest regard, but faulted his
historiography for refusing to let the Idea penetrate into reality apart from
converted hearts.74 Neander, charged Baur, cannot know “if the history of the
71 Hauschild, “Dogmengeschichtsschreibung,” 117-19. 72 On this shift see Dietz Lange, “Glaubenslehre,” RGG4 3, 993-94, and especially Brian Gerrish, “From Dogmatik to Glaubenslehre: A Paradigm Change in Modern Theology?” in Continuing the Reformation: Essays on Modern Religious Thought (Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1993), 239-248. 73 Nigg, Die Kirchengeschichtsschreibung, 197-202. 74 F. C. Baur, Die Epochen der kirchlichen Geschichtschreibung (1852; Hildesheim: Georg Olms, 1962), 201-32. On Baur’s history of dogma labours see Steck, 41-48; more generally
40
Christian church is the movement of the idea of the church” or just haphazard
development.75 A church historiography or ecclesiology in which doctrines
and institutional forms were treated as external flounders in the error of
docetism. Indeed, Baur and idealist thinkers raised church history and the
history of dogma to dizzyingly objective heights: “the doctrine of Jesus is not
just the content of Dogmengeshichte, it is, too, the form of its historical
development.”76 The church is the Christus prolongatus: the history of its
constitution and dogmas recount the absolutely necessary stages of the divine
becoming.77
After the mid-century breakdown of Hegel’s thought into various
wings, the conservative wing proved a great ally of the study of the history of
doctrine, certain of doctrine’s importance and confident of its unfolding
progress in the thought of the church.78 It would be of no little importance for
evangelical Scots like James Orr (chapter 5). There are grounds for Harnack’s
grumble that Hegel would always be the ally of theological conservatives!79
Certain features within romanticism and idealism permitted the study
of the history of doctrine to be re-founded as a constructive discipline in the
nineteenth century. This must be emphasised over against the fact that the first
trajectory of the study of the history of doctrine sought to liberate Christianity
by obliterating its doctrines and dogmas. The rejuvenators’ often notorious
reputations as the scourges of faith among many nineteenth-century Anglo-
Saxon Protestants obscures the debt owed to them by some of the very same
theological conservators who tried to defend church doctrine from the
criticism of history (trajectory one) by vindicating it through history
(trajectory two). The liberal-conservative paradigm employed in much
theological historiography misleads, despite a kernel of truth. It should be
remembered that Schleiermacher was widely acclaimed in the nineteenth
see Horton Harris, The Tübingen School: A Historical and Theological Investigation of the School of F. C. Baur, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1990). 75 Ibid., 248. 76 Kantzenbach, ED, 117. See Baur, Die Epochen, 251-52. 77 Baur, Die Epochen, 252-260. 78 On Hegelian parties see Karl Löwith, From Hegel to Nietzsche: The Revolution in Nineteenth-Century Thought, trans. David E. Green (New York: Columbia UP, 1964), 53-135. 79 Adolph Harnack, History of Dogma, Vol. 1, trans. Neil Buchanan (London: William & Norgate, 1894), 35.
41
century, even by conservative theologians who looked askance at many
aspects of his theology, for driving a stake into rationalist religion’s dry heart,
and for renewing interest in ecclesiology and doctrine through his passion for
Christ and emphasis on the church living in history.80 His fingerprints show up
in surprising places.81 Similarly, conservative theologians in Germany and
Scotland who were influenced by idealism saw the Spirit of God unfolding in
the religious consciousness as dogmas and doctrines, which, though perhaps
not fixed and final, were indispensable. A surprising anecdote suggests that
despite significant differences, as far as the issue of the historical origins and
development of church doctrine is concerned, Schleiermacherian romanticism,
Hegelian idealism, and eventually many evangelicals were in cahoots against
the older, rationalist historical criticism of church doctrine. At a farewell
dinner in the 1820s for the University of Berlin Dozent and leader of the
German evangelical movement [Erweckungsbewegung] August Tholuck
(1799-1877), newly promoted to professor ordinarius at Halle, he was feted
by his colleagues Hegel, Neander, and Schleiermacher. “Hegel had called out
to him at the farewell dinner: ‘You go out and give a pereat to that old Halle
Rationalism!’”82
Within a very short span of time, nineteenth-century Presbyterians
encountered two ways of approaching the study of the history of doctrine.
Both were critical and thoroughly historical. Each, however, assumed a
80 E. g., August Tholuck, “Evangelical Theology in Germany: Survey of my Life as a Teacher of Theology,” in History, Essays, Orations, and Other Documents of the Sixth General Conference of the Evangelical Alliance, 85-89; Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1 (1872-73; reprint, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), 303; Vol. 2: 440; Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics, Vol. 1, trans. John Vriend, ed. John Bolt (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2003), 120, 289; Henry B. Smith, System of Christian Theology (New York: A. C. Armstrong and Son, 1884), 48; John MacPherson, Christian Dogmatics (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1898), 35-36; Eduard Böhl, Dogmatik. Darstellung der christlichen Glaubenslehre auf reformirt-kirchlicher Grundlage (Amsterdam: von Scheffer, 1887), xxiii-xix. 81 Schleiermacher’s implicit influence can be illustrated from two examples from the resolutely traditional ‘Old Princeton’. A. A. Hodge (1823-86) employed the “feeling of absolute dependence on God” in the section on the proofs of divine existence in his Outlines of Theology (London: T. Nelson and Sons, 1877), 31. In his important 1908 article “Calvinism”, reprinted in The Works of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol. 5 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1991), 353-66, B. B. Warfield (1851-1921) resisted a systematic definition, insisting instead that Calvinism be understood foremost via the religious consciousness as an apprehension of divine majesty. 82 Leopold Witte, Das Leben D. Friedrich August Gottreu Tholuck’s, Bd. 1 (Bielefeld and Leipzig: von Velhagen & Klasing, 1884), 451. The Prussian monarchy, at that time heavily influenced by Pietism, had parachuted Tholuck into Halle to counter-balance the prevailing rationalism.
42
different understanding of history, and therefore of the historical nature of the
church and doctrine. Both would figure prominently in how evangelical
Presbyterians considered and assessed the historicity of church doctrine.
1.4. Church: Scottish and Reformed
[1.4.1] Through the charismatic leadership of reformers like John Knox
(c.1505-72), a Reformed confession and liturgy and books of ‘discipline’
advancing a largely Presbyterian polity were approved by Scotland’s
parliament in 1560 and again in 1578, but the Scottish church was finally
Presbyterian only in 1690.83 After the threat of Roman Catholicism faded with
the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, Scotland’s church seesawed for a
century between Presbyterianism and Episcopacy. Despite a shared
Protestantism and Scottish king, James VI, who ascended the English throne
as James I (1603-25), the Scottish and English churches inclined to different
centres of the continental Reformation. Already with Knox, Scotland was
linked personally and theologically to the bold reform of Geneva, with its
whitewashed worship, tearing down of time-honoured traditions for the sake
of a church reformed according to the Word of God, and, especially after
Theodore Beza, confident ius divinum Presbyterianism. The protracted
establishment of Scottish Presbyterianism impinges in no small way on my
study.
James, who had been reared by Presbyterians, found the English
church settlement more amenable to his increasingly preening assertion of
divine-right monarchy—“no bishops no king” became his opinion—and a
collision course was set with Scottish Presbyterians equally confident of
divine backing. Through royal ministrations, episcopacy was strengthened in
Scotland, Anglican liturgical paraphernalia introduced, and the Presbyterian
General Assembly suspended. Charles I (1625-49) lacked his father’s tact but
none of his divine-right pretensions. When he rashly sought to further
anglicize the Scottish church, a nation-wide backlash was triggered. Taking
83 This section is derived from J. H. S. Burleigh, A Church History of Scotland (London: Oxford UP, 1960), 188-257; M. H. Dotterweich, “Melville, Andrew (1545-1622),” BDE, 422-424; idem, “Knox, John (c.1514-1572), BDE, 345-349; Andrew Pettegree, “The Spread of Calvin’s Thought,” in The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, ed. Donald K. McKim (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2004), 207-224.
43
advantage of Charles’ domestic quandaries, a “Solemn League and Covenant”
was declared “for the preservation of the Reformed Religion in the Church of
Scotland, in Doctrine, Worship, Discipline and Government, against our
common enemies.”84 The General Assembly reconvened and clawed back the
Stuarts’ ecclesiastical policies as Parliament marched an army south to support
the English Parliament’s grievance with the king. Oliver Cromwell’s eventual
triumph in the civil war allowed fleeting Presbyterian ascendancy in the C of
S, rescinded upon the return of Charles II (1660-85) from exile. Against
trenchant opposition, Episcopacy was violently imposed; subsequent decades
entered Scottish history and lore as “the Killing Time”, the blood of their
martyrs reinforcing Presbyterians’ primitivist ecclesiology. Only when
Charles’ Catholic brother James II abdicated in 1688 did the C of S become
securely Presbyterian.
An antagonistic relationship to its greater southern neighbour and its
established church was an outcome of the conflict-ridden establishment of
Presbyterianism. England and Scotland, ancient political and cultural
differences notwithstanding, partook of a common church prior to the
Reformation. But Scotland’s early predilection for Genevan reform set it on a
divergent track, and subsequent Scottish theology looked to the Continent for
inspiration and only rarely south.85 When George Hendry asserted in 1937 that
“Scottish theology has to find its true affinity with the theology of continental
Protestantism rather than with that of England and America” he was
demanding nothing novel, despite presumption.86 Reformation and post-
Reformation Scottish divines were often schooled on the Continent or took up
teaching posts there.87 Numerous ministers waited out exile in continental
centres of Reformed Protestantism. Dynastic and political ties between France
and Scotland dated from the Middle Ages: Huguenot academies in Sedan and
Saumur were natural choices for Scottish students. Relative ease of
transportation to and from the Calvinist Netherlands, plus the international
84 “Solemn League and Covenant, 1643,” in Gordon Donaldson, ed., Scottish Historical Documents (Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, 1970), 208. 85 The Tudor church looked foremost to Zürich: see W. J. Torrance Kirby, The Zurich Connection and Tudor Political Theory (Leiden: Brill, 2007). 86 George S. Hendry, God the Creator (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1937), viii. Hendry wanted to find a hearing in Scotland for Brunner and Barth. 87 A. L. Drummond, The Kirk and the Continent (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1956), 26-136.
44
reputation of Leiden, Groningen, and Utrecht drew many Scots. Scottish
students from the sixteenth into the eighteenth century frequented the
University of Heidelberg in the reformed Palatinate, and academies in Herborn
(Germany) and Geneva. To great effect, as we shall see, Scottish divinity’s
centuries-old habit of looking to the Continent for theological stimulation and
as a means of circumventing Anglican restrictions and harassment was
resumed in the nineteenth-century after a hiatus during the isolation of the
British Isles in the Napoleonic era. Mr. Gore did not appear to have read any
of the German treatments on the subject, clucked FC professor James Iverach
(1839-1922) in a review of Lux Mundi—indeed, a running criticism directed at
the C of E by nineteenth-century Scottish evangelical theologians was that it
was insular.88
[1.4.2] The same 1690 parliamentary act that would finally secure the
C of S as Presbyterian ratified the Westminster Standards—a confession of
faith, larger and shorter catechism, and directory of worship—as the C of S’s
standard of belief, subordinate only to the Bible (see also 1.2.3). At the onset
of the Civil War, the Long Parliament had convoked an assembly of divines
from among the various factions clamouring for further reform of the C of E to
draw up a confession of faith. English and Welsh delegates, Scottish guests,
and parliamentary representatives sat in session at Westminster Abbey until
1648, and irregularly thereafter.89 Although the resulting Confession (as the
body of documents in toto is typically referred to) was quickly adopted by the
national parliaments, simmering political and ecclesiastical differences in the
Puritan coalition that had been arrayed against established church and king
soon boiled over in open conflict, rendering it impotent to effect political and
ecclesiastical unity. Following the Restoration, the C of S, however, kept
88 James Iverach, “Mr. Gore on the Incarnation,” ET 3 (1891/92): 302-07. Similarly William G. Blaikie, “Catholic Presbyterianism,” Catholic Presbyterian 1 (1879): 2. Stephen Sykes laments this insularity in “Germany and England: An Attempt at Theological Diplomacy,” in England and Germany: Studies in Theological Diplomacy, ed. Stephen Sykes (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1982), 146-70. 89 On the Assembly and Standards see Sinclair B. Ferguson, “The Teaching of the Confession,’ in The Westminster Confession in the Church Today, ed. A. I. C. Heron (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1982), 28-39; John H. Leith, Assembly at Westminster: Reformed Theology in the Making (Richmond: John Knox, 1973).
45
intact the Confession as a statement of faith, standard for church government,
and order of worship.
The Confession indelibly marked Scottish Presbyterianism. After 1690,
all ministers, elders, and probationers subscribed to it as true and worthy of
full adherence. After 1711, subscription was ratcheted tighter through a
formula aimed at squeezing out closet Jacobites or Episcopalians. The above,
now to include university professors, were obligated to “own the same as my
confession of faith.”90 And far from being the preserve of clergy, A. C.
Cheyne maintains that the entire religious life of Scotland between the
seventeenth and nineteenth centuries should be considered as an ellipse
between the Bible and the Confession.91 The distillation of over a century of
Reformed theology, the Confession is Presbyterian, Calvinist, and Protestant
orthodox. Presbyterian polity is endorsed on scriptural grounds and, consistent
with the Genevan origins of this ecclesiology, a prominent place is given to
church discipline. Keynotes of Calvin—or, at least, of the Genevan
reformation—on the law, the civil magistrate, the sacraments, and the
mediation of Christ are joined by typically Reformed treatments of Scripture,
divine sovereignty, and justification by faith. The scholastic method typical of
post-Reformation Protestant theology lends the Confession its measured tone
and enables its precise, carefully wrought doctrinal definitions; its doctrine of
assurance and its bipartite covenantal structure further locate it within
Reformed orthodoxy’s honing of the theology of the Reformation.
Derogatory references to the Confession litter scholarly and popular
literature. The “harsh legalism” of its “narrow, dogmatic Calvinism” forged
manacles—theological, moral, aesthetic—that bound Scotland in
unevangelical servitude. Critics sometimes look for liberation in the breaking
of all dogmatic irons, but more often in the retreat from a sullied Confession to
a pure Calvin.92 Whatever their theological merits, such criticisms are
tendentious and historically simplistic, yet at least underscore (if negatively)
90 Cited by Ian Hamilton, “Subscription, Confessional,” DSCHT, 805-806. 91 A. C. Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk: Victorian Scotland’s Religious Revolution (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1983), 4. 92 Thomas F. Torrance’s tendentious Scottish Theology: From John Knox to John McLeod Campbell (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1996) and J. B. Torrance’s “Strengths and Weaknesses of the Westminster Theology,” in The Westminster Confession in the Church Today, 40-53, exemplify the Torrance brothers’ influential criticisms of Westminster Calvinism.
46
the Confession’s massive impact on Scottish church life. The Confession left a
deep imprint in part because it is a weighty document: it circumambulates then
maps a vast terrain. Through rote memorization the Westminster Assembly’s
popular Shorter Catechism pounded the “whole counsel of God, concerning all
things necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith, and life” (1:6) into
generations of children. This breadth, coupled with a conceptualization of faith
that awarded place of prominence to correct belief in pure doctrine, formed a
highly intellectualized and exceedingly dogmatic tradition that insisted upon
notitia of God’s truth and assensus to it as marks of the true church (25:2-4). J.
H. Merle D’Aubingé (1794-1872), a Swiss professor whose racy histories of
the Reformation made him one of the most popular church historians of his
time, marvelled upon visiting Scotland in 1845 at the penetrating grasp of
Christian doctrine by laypersons.93 William Cunningham reminded New
College graduates at their 1856 convocation that their chief task as ministers
would be to teach “correct knowledge of the fundamental principles of
Christian doctrine.”94 A similarity to Lutheranism’s rich confessional heritage
is obvious, in contrast to the more implicit doctrine of those traditions centred
upon a prayer-book or ritual act. Thus it comes as no surprise that
Dogmengeschichte was most avidly pursued in the Lutheran and Reformed
traditions.
The ahistoricism of the Confession is also telling. Despite the
Assembly’s setting in the millennial ferment of the English Civil War and the
Confession’s federal (foedus) theology, which marched along to God’s
covenantal acts in history, any sort of historical awareness is conspicuously
lacking. On the contrary, the Confession’s teaching on the perspicuity of
Scripture and optimistic assessment of the aptitude of human reason to
interpret God’s revealed will evoke a timeless presentation of divine verities,
even if Reformed orthodoxy formally made a very sharp division between
theologia nostra and theologia in se.95 Yes, it is common for Reformed
theologians to smugly claim for their tradition (in contrast to the “closed”
93 J. H. Merle D’Aubingé, Germany, England, and Scotland; or, Recollections of a Swiss Minister (New York: Robert Carter, 1848), 119-20, 122. 94 William Cunningham, Principal Cunningham’s Address (Edinburgh, n.p., 1856), 4. 95 See the illuminating section in Muller, PRRD 1: 221-38. The Confession’s claim that Scripture’s meaning
47
hubris of the Lutheran Book of Concord) an “open” posture that denies any
single confession status as a definitive articulation of the revelation of God,
but rather accumulates sundry confessions into a manifold witness. “The large
number of Reformed confessions is evidence that Reformed churches have
always sought to bring the gospel to bear on the specific theological, moral,
and political issues that have arisen in new social and historical contexts.”96
This claim is technically correct but should not obscure the fact that the
Confession, like Reformed confessions of a similar period, neither endorsed
nor was aware of any sort of historical relativism, or that the Confession was
still to be subscribed to as the most definitive and authoritative confession
fallible humans could make in that time and place. The rise of historical
consciousness would affront any theological system like the Confession that
articulated doctrine without explicit regard to historicity or teleology.
A final aspect of Westminster’s legacy pertinent to my study is its
ambiguous treatment of the religious duties of the civil magistrate. One
hundred and fifty years of belligerence between Protestant and Roman
Catholic, then Presbyterian and Episcopalian, was the crucible in which a
peculiar church was forged: resolute and supercilious, steeled by doctrine and
brashly confident of the “clear and perfect notes…by which the true Kirk be
discerned from the filthy synagogue” (Scots Confession, 18). As well as pure
doctrine and holy conduct, an ecclesia reformata demanded jealousy for the
“crown rights” of Jesus Christ. The uncompromising Andrew Melville (1545-
1622) flouted in James’ face that “there are two kings and two kingdoms in
Scotland. There is Christ Jesus the King and His kingdom the Kirk, whose
subject King James the Sixth is, and of whose kingdom not a king, nor a lord,
nor a head, but a member.”97 Presbyterians outstripped other magisterial
Protestants in exalting the spiritual freedom of the church under the ascended
Christ—with it came fierce intolerance toward the state’s infringement on the
spiritual realm of the church’s King and, as Scottish church history abundantly
illustrates, fissiparous tendencies over perceived trespasses on Christ’s rights.
96 Shirley C. Guthrie “The Doctrinal Task of the Reformed Church,” Bulletin of the Institute for Reformed Theology 2 (2000): 4. See also, e.g., Jack Stotts, “Introduction,” to Jan Rohls, Reformed Confessions: Theology from Zurich to Barmen, trans. John Hoffmeyer (Louisville: WJK, 1998). 97 Cited without reference in Burleigh, 205.
48
Accordingly, the Confession cramps the civil magistrate’s power vis-à-
vis the church by an anti-Erastian interpretation of the Reformation’s “two
kingdoms” doctrine (23:1); from its side, the (assumedly) Christian
magistrate’s governing of the realm is protected from meddlesome
ecclesiastics (31:4). And yet, the Confession exhorts rulers “to take order, that
unity and peace be preserved in the Church, that the truth of God be kept pure
and entire; that all blasphemies and heresies be suppressed; all corruptions and
abuses in worship and discipline prevented or reformed; and all the ordinances
of God duly settled, administered, and observed” (23:3), and nods at its own
parliamentary-given mandate (23:3, 31:2). This “Constantinian” tension
between the freedom of the church and the civil proscription and maintenance
of religion troubled Scottish church life for three centuries. As shall be shown
in the next section, the ecclesial bodies at the centre of this study, the FC and
the UP, came into being precisely at the point when the civil magistracy’s
religious responsibilities clashed with evangelical exigencies.98
[1.4.3] The 1707 Act of Union that created the United Kingdom has
been widely interpreted as a marriage of convenience necessitated by political
instability, economic opportunity, and fear that occasioned little rejoicing
among most Scots.99 Among the problems soon apparent was Parliament’s
reintroduction of lay patronage—i.e. the right of a patron to select a minister,
or approve or reject the congregation’s or Presbytery’s choice of a minister—
in defiance of both popular opinion and the 1707 Act of Union pledges that
Scottish legal and religious traditions would “continue without any
alteration.”100 Patronage raises crucial problems for a Presbyterian church: in
polity, it deprives the congregation of its right to choose a minister;
theologically, it denudes the spiritual independence of the church; and since
98 T. M. Devine, The Scottish Nation 1700-2000 (Allen Lane: Penguin, 1999), 379: “Evangelicalism was at the root of the great schism of the Church of Scotland.” 99 In addition to Burleigh, 286-333, I am indebted here to Jeffrey Stephen, “The Kirk and the Union, 1706-1707: A Reappraisal,” RSCHS 31 (2002): 68-96; David W. Bebbington, “Evangelicalism in Modern Scotland,” SBET 9 (1991): 4-7; Richard Sher, Church and University in the Scottish Enlightenment: The Moderate Literati of Edinburgh (Princeton: Princeton UP, 1985), and especially John McIntosh, Church and Theology in Enlightenment Scotland: The Popular Party, 1740-1800 (East Linton: Tuckwell, 1998). 100 “1707 Act for the Security of the Church of Scotland,” in Donaldson, Scottish Historical Documents, 275.
49
the eighteenth-century Scottish gentry were highly anglicized, it raised the
spectre of nationalism. Because the state controlled many churches, and many
more were located on estates, by the 1720s laymen—government agencies,
lairds, or lords—were increasingly exercising patronage over “their”
congregations, protests from congregations, presbyteries, and the General
Assembly notwithstanding.
The course of the eighteenth century saw an “evolving theological
alignment” of three parties, all of whom received the Confession and resorted
to it for their position on lay patronage.101 There was, first, an orthodox party,
dominant in the first third of the eighteenth century, drawing sustenance from
the strong meat of Westminster theology and Puritan spirituality, and opposed
in principle to patronage. Second, there was a moderate party, stimulated by
the intellectual currents of the Enlightenment, honouring the letter of the
Confession but forsaking its spirit for latitudinarian religion. Urbane,
conservative, “ostensibly if tepidly orthodox,”102 moderates never achieved
numerical supremacy but through skill and the benefices provided of
patronage controlled the machinery of the Assembly and the university chairs
for much of the century. The moderates made peace with the patronage system
and deployed it to ensure stability in church and state, as well as to fence the
pulpit from that bane of enlightened religion—spiritual “enthusiasm”. Finally,
the seed of an evangelical party planted in the so-called Marrow Controversy
by the parish minister Thomas Boston and others blossomed, the result being
an intelligent and irenic evangelicalism as the dominant religious influence in
the latter decades of the eighteenth century.103 Scottish evangelicals tapped
into the nascent trans-Atlantic movement that connected continental Pietism,
Jonathan Edwards and the Great Awakening in America, and the evangelists
George Whitefield and John Wesley.104 Cross-centred, Bible-based, busy to
101 The phrase and taxonomy are McIntosh’s. 102 Burleigh, 303. 103 See David C. Lachman, The Marrow Controversy. 1718-1723: An Historical and Theological Analysis (Edinburgh: Rutherford House, 1983). 104 On the international origins of evangelicalism see Mark A. Noll, The Rise of Evangelicalism: The Age of Edwards, Whitefield, and the Wesleys (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2004); Erich Geldbach, “‘Evangelisch’, ‘Evangelikal’ and Pietism: Some Remarks on Early Evangelicalism and Globalization from a German Perspective,” in Global Faith: Essays on Evangelicalism and Globalization, eds. Mark Hutchison and O. Kalu (Sydney: Centre for the Study of Australian Christianity, 1998), 156-180; W. R. Ward, The Protestant Evangelical Awakening (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1992).
50
redeem both sinful society and souls, evangelicals combined traditional
Protestant belief with openness to fresh movements of the Spirit and
enlightened commitments to toleration, inductive reason, and free inquiry—
what one English Congregationalist called “a disinterested love of truth”105—
which British Dissent and its American children had long owed to Locke, even
if their confidence in reason seemed to jar with the severe anthropology of
their professed theology.
While patronage was not the issue per se dividing these groups, it
became the catalyst for exacerbating theological differences over ecclesiology,
the human predicament, and the nature of salvation. While many orthodox and
evangelicals had blended together by the end of the eighteenth century into the
“popular” party in the C of S, other evangelicals abandoned the establishment
or were pushed out. One needs a scorecard to keep track of eighteenth-century
secessions from the state church.106 The first originated in the 1733 deposition
of Ebenezer Erskine for preaching Christ’s sole headship of the church in
response to the trumping of congregationally-chosen ministers by lay patrons.
A second major secession, the Relief Church, originated as an evangelical
clarion call for religious liberty. It formed the vanguard opposing slavery and
promoting foreign missions in Scotland; its emphasis on the church as a
collegia pietatis, over against the longstanding, inclusive notion of the C of S
as the covenant nation at worship, was distinctly modern. The Relief Church
was the first Presbyterian body in Scotland to endorse “voluntaryism”, a
conviction they carried into their 1847 union with the USC as the UPC, and a
fact that necessitated revision of the Confession.
This instance of confessional amendment cannot be overlooked, even if
the tweaking of a matter like the power of the civil magistrate lacks the gravity
of a Nicene article.107 After all, the methodology of the Confession, noted
above, does not officially permit a gradation between central and peripheral
doctrines, nor did the pretensions of divine right [ius divinum] Presbyterians
105 Robert W. Dale, The Old Evangelicalism and the New (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1889), 19. 106 A helpful one is Kenneth R. Ross, “Secessions,” DSCHT, 764-65. 107 See Ian Hamilton, The Erosion of Calvinist Orthodoxy: Seceders and Subscription in Scottish Presbyterianism (Edinburgh: Rutherford House, 1990); idem, “Subscription, Confessional,” DSCHT, 805-806.
51
that held every iota of their polity as divinely ordained.108 There is no evidence
of a covert laxity ever granted elders and ministers to “marginal” doctrines
when subscribing to the whole Confession as containing the truths of God. To
amend any article was to concede that the church’s standard belonged to
another time and place, and that its doctrinal formulations could become
redundant or were, in hindsight, always erroneous. This was something all
Presbyterians theoretically admitted, but it was these secessionist bodies,
renowned for their strict Reformed doctrine and strenuous cultivation of
personal holiness, who, feeling the prick of the state’s power of the sword,
were the first to amend the Confession so as to sheath that sword. Over several
decades, belief in state toleration of religion and liberty of conscience
germinated in the secessionist churches, culminating in calls for the separation
of church and state. The tacit recognition that the Confession’s teaching on
this matter was antiquated because the church’s understanding of the Bible
had progressed beyond the seventeenth century mind crystallized into softer
formulas of confessional subscription in the USC in 1820 and, when it merged
with the Relief Church in 1847, the UP.109
But an adversarial relationship to the civil magistrate was only the
efficient cause of confessional revision. Evangelicalism was the material
cause. The secessionist churches were steeped in evangelicalism and
appropriated its valuation of toleration, tendency to position itself around pan-
Protestant essentials, and bibliocentricism. The latter, crucially, could disarm
confessions and doctrine if they were perceived to obscure the priority of
Biblical teaching or hinder the “gospel call”. Accordingly, a tension between
Reformed confession and evangelical sola scriptura runs throughout the
history of the USC and UP, which occasionally erupted in formal
investigations and heresy trials. The secessionist churches shared in the early
nineteenth-century Europe-wide evangelical retrenchment of the doctrine of
Scripture in the face of attacks on the Bible’s inspiration, historical veracity,
108 A. Craig Troxel, “‘Divine Right’ Presbyterianism and Church Power,” (PhD diss., Westminster Theological Seminary, 1998), 91-92. 109 David Woodside, The Soul of a Scottish Church; or, The Contribution of the United Presbyterian Church to Scottish Life and Religion (Edinburgh: The United Free Church of Scotland, n.d); Stewart D. Gill, “United Presbyterian Church, 1847-1900,” DSCHT, 839-40.
52
and doctrines.110 Against Scripture’s cultured despisers, evangelicals now
strongly emphasized the Bible’s plenary inspiration and full inerrancy in fact
and teaching. Their counter-offensive, surprisingly, used the same arsenal
claimed by their rationalist opponents—a commitment to free and impartial
inquiry—that hastened a looser stance toward creeds and confessions of faith.
As a nineteenth-century evangelical argued: “The gentle—the violent—
pressure which used to be put on reluctant texts by theologians and preachers
of all creeds to make them say the right thing or to prevent them from saying
the wrong, was as bad as the gentle or violent pressure put on obstinate
heretics by the inquisition with precisely the same object.”111
While the tension detected in the secessionist bodies between
evangelicalism’s inductive approach to Scripture and the inherited
confessional system should not be overplayed so as to cast doubt on their (and,
later, the UP’s) essentially traditional and Reformed convictions, it does figure
in this study.112 Evangelicals invested the Bible with practical—not just
theoretical—authority over confession and doctrine. The fourth chapter, in
particular, will show how this trait would be heightened in reaction to the
bloating of the importance of early church dogma by the Tractarians and
Newman at the expense of Scripture’s clarity and sufficiency, by the profound
impact of the Moody Revival (1873-74) in transcending denominational and
confessional particularity, and at century’s end, lent unprecedented
sophistication and historical credibility by a surprising ally—Albrecht Ritschl.
In this vein, the evangelical Congregationalist and Ritschlian Robert
Mackintosh could criticize Martin Kähler’s dictum that ‘the Jesus of history is
the Christ of faith’ as playing into the hands of the high church party!113
110 Kenneth J. Stewart, Restoring the Reformation: British Evangelicals and the Francophone ‘Reveil’ 1816-1849 (Milton Keynes, UK: Paternoster, 1996) reconstructs the Scottish-Continental evangelical bridge, especially concerning the Bible. See also David Bebbington, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s (London: Unwin Hymen, 1989), 75-77. 111 Dale, The Old Evangelicalism and the New, 25-26. 112 Even the softened subscription formulas in the secessionist churches were very similar to the ones held by conservative American Presbyterians. See William Barker, “System Subscription,” WTJ 63 (2001): 1-14. 113 Robert Mackintosh, “Historical,” in DCG, Vol. 1, ed. James Hastings (New York: Scribners, 1906), 726-728.
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[1.4.4] Evangelical vitriol against rationalism, as in the nineteenth-
century clash in the C of S between populars and moderates, disguises
evangelicalism’s deep debt to the Enlightenment. Evangelicals reaped the
harvest of the Enlightenment’s remarkable blooming in Scotland, for, far from
being an intellectual backwater in the eighteenth century,
Scottish universities and the coteries of cultivated men in the bigger towns were lively intellectual centres at a time when universities in Europe, and especially the two torpid seminaries of Oxford and Cambridge, were in their doldrums. At Edinburgh, in particular, with its High Courts of Justice and a well-educated bar, a good university with many able teachers, three libraries which in some sense were ‘public’ and in all senses were remarkably well furnished with books of scholarship, we have a centre of research facilities without its equal in contemporary Europe.114
Besides commitment to religious toleration and free inquiry, evangelical
Presbyterians were decisively shaped by the “Commonsense philosophy” or
“Scottish Realism” initiated by Thomas Reid (1710-96), moderate C of S
minister and professor of moral philosophy at Glasgow, and developed by his
disciples.115 They resisted Locke’s view—radicalized by Hume—that the
mind knows only sensations of external reality, insisting instead that the
mind’s constitution permits knowledge of things as they really are.
Commonsense discloses innate beliefs, the denial of which would force us to
act and think absurdly, as if our perceptions did not give us the world as it
really is. These basic beliefs include God’s existence, the reality of the world,
and the relation between cause and effect. Hume’s epistemological scepticism
regarding the reliability of our perceptions of cause and effect or the
believability of God, and Kant’s metaphysical agnosticism were rejected. In
addition, Scottish Realism extended intuition of reality to include a universal
moral sense and the universal applicability of Bacon’s inductive method
whereby “truths about consciousness, the world, or religion must be built by a
strict induction from irreducible facts of experience.”116
114 Hays, Annalists and Historians, 176. 115 Paul Helm, “Scottish Realism,” DSCHT, 759-60. 116 Mark A. Noll, “Common Sense Tradition and American Evangelical Thought,” AmQ 37 (1985): 222-23. See also Michael Gauvreau, “The Empire of Evangelicalism: Varieties of Common Sense in Scotland, Canada, and the United States,” in Evangelicalism: Comparative Studies of Popular Protestantism in North America, the British Isles, and Beyond, 1700-1990, ed. Mark A. Noll et al. (New York: Oxford UP, 1994), 219-252.
54
Despite origins that evangelicals could consider rather suspect, Scottish
Realism became the stock intellectual property of much nineteenth-century
evangelicalism, offering a working philosophy that justified traditional theism,
established a common morality, and accommodated scientific discovery. And
despite elitist origins in a moderate party frightened by any whiff of
subversion of state or church, Scottish Realism lent itself to sedition. Its appeal
to ‘everyman’ commonsense played a key role in providing intellectual
justification for the American Revolution, and its ascendancy in post-
Revolutionary intellectual circles owed much to its ability to provide
foundations for law, morality, and religion as the old order and verities were
being swept away or cast under suspicion.117 In this regard, Scottish Realism
was well suited for evangelical appropriation: it buttressed orthodox doctrine
and gave due respect to revelation and reason, but also relocated authority
away from traditional church hierarchies and creeds to the democratic intellect
and universal facts of experience.
“Evangelicalized” Scottish Realism predisposed Victorian
Presbyterians against the notion of the historical development of doctrine in
two ways. First, it strengthened Scottish theology’s traditional perspective on
Scripture and tradition, as well as its ahistorical theological method. Inductive
method reinforced the sufficiency of the biblical text as the singular source for
doctrine, from which revealed “facts” were mined out of the Bible and then
systematized. James Buchanan’s opening lecture at the 1851 inauguration of
New College’s new premises compared a botanist who tramps over a meadow
to locate then classify flowers to a theologian who classifies doctrines after
inductively studying Scripture.118 Because this method presupposed the
universal, intuitive faculty of the mind, gleaned facts, e.g. doctrines, were as
fixed as the scientist’s specimens. George Smeaton, launching his initial
lecture at the Aberdeen FC College with a timely quote from Bacon, attacked
the “Schleiermacher school” for putting doctrine at the mercy of the Spirit’s 117 George Marsden, Fundamentalism and American Culture. The Shaping of Twentieth-Century Evangelicalism: 1870-1925 (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1980), 14-18. 118 James Buchanan, “Systematic Theology,” in Inauguration of the New College of the Free Church, Edinburgh: November, M.DCCC.L. With Introductory Lectures on Theology, Philosophy, and Natural Science (London and Edinburgh: Johnstone & Hunter, 1851), 79-100. For similar definitions of theological method by evangelical Reformed theologians of that era see: Hodge, Systematic Theology, 1:10; W. G. T. Shedd, Dogmatic Theology, Vol. 1 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1888), 3-4.
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historical life in the church.119 This aspect will be explicit when evangelical
Scots’ contentions that Newman’s theory of historical development belittled
Scripture as neither fully containing nor clearly disclosing saving doctrine are
examined.
Second, Commonsense thought’s orientation to the facts of experience
kept its feet firmly planted on the ground. It distrusted speculation and so had
little sympathy with romanticism or German idealism. As a sharp-tongued
Highlander remarked after hearing William Robertson Smith defend himself
before the 1881 FC Assembly from heresy charges for propagating
Wellhausen’s documentary hypothesis: “All hus [Smith’s] goots kam un papar
parsals from Shermany, for un that kuntry they kan spin an waive wi’oot wan
tuft o’ wool, they take their threed, like a spider, oot o’ their own booals.”120
Theories of the Spirit’s realization in national, political, or dogmatic
development, philosophies that spoke grandly of History rather than historical
facts were, in the opinion of many evangelical Presbyterians in this era,
fancies plucked from the ethereal heights of speculative idealism rather than
dug from the sure rock of factual experience.
For various reasons, over the course of the nineteenth century Scottish
Realism as a coherent philosophy caved in before idealism; as a habit of mind,
however, it did not disappear. Chapter 4 suggests that the “back to Christ”
movement associated with Ritschl could, upon reaching Scottish firths, draw
upon the residue of Common Sense thought to reject positive theories of
doctrinal development, even after the propositional view of Biblical revelation
underwriting an inductive approach to theology had been replaced by a more
historicized view of the Bible.
[1.4.5] Of course, Scottish Realism and its empiricist kin was not the
only philosophical contender in nineteenth-century Britain. Tendrils of
German romanticism were snaking into Britain by the century’s beginning
and, after arrest by Napoleonic-era tumult, resumed growth thereafter. Initial
119 George Smeaton, The Necessary Harmony Between Doctrine and Spiritual Life: Being an Introductory Lecture, Delivered on the 9th November, 1853, to the Free Church Students attending the Divinity Hall at Aberdeen (Aberdeen: A. Brown & Co., 1853), 9-10. 120 Anonymous [James Kennedy], A Purteekler Acoont o’ the Last Assembly. By Wan o’ the Hielan’ Host (Edinburgh: James Gemmell, 1881), 16.
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optimism that sensible Anglo-Saxon intellectual soil would prove inhospitable
to the transplantation of a foreign weed gave way to fear as it did germinate
and grow—a development made more comprehensible by the fact that
romanticism was at first aesthetically diffused. It was Walter Scott’s novels of
pre-modern Britain—bucolic, gothic, Catholic—which “struck the new note of
the century,”121 wagered John Tulloch (a claim that could be transferred to
Samuel Taylor Coleridge or extended to the Sturm und Drang writings of the
Scot Thomas Carlyle).122 But by mid-century, Patrick Fairbairn had to issue an
achtung! regarding romantic thought to FC seminarians in Aberdeen: no
longer a stranger to British soil, German idealism posed a greater threat than
the revelation-denying, doctrine-discarding rationalism of an earlier age, for
its philosophers and theologians perniciously “hold principles in direct
antagonism with everything usually denominated religious, who yet as freely
talk of the incarnation, redemption, inspiration, God taught men, divine light,
and eternal life, as if the Bible itself were their text book.”123 He was not alone
in recognizing the challenge of romanticism and philosophical idealism for
traditional Scotch philosophy and Calvinist theology.124
The romantic stimulus to the historical study of the church and doctrine
has been touched upon (1.3.3). Its effects on the historicizing of doctrine were
various—even contradictory—in keeping with a movement itself fraught by
antinomies. On one hand, historians detect romanticism behind the shared
esteem within the Oxford Movement, the Mercersburg theology, and German
Neo-Lutheranism for classical dogma, as well as their stout defence of the
visible church from both the secularizing aims of political liberalism and the
corrosive effects of ad hoc evangelical ecclesiologies.125 And yet, aspects of
121 John Tulloch, Movements of Religious Thought in Britain during the Nineteenth Century (London: Longman, Green, & Co., 1885), 125. Newman thought similarly according to Ian Ker, John Henry Newman: A Biography (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988), 173. 122 On the literary diffusion of German romanticism into Britain see Rosemary Ashton, The German Idea: Four English Writers and the Reception of German Thought, 1800-1860 (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1988). 123 Patrick Fairbairn, The Calling and Acquirements of the Christian Ministry, Viewed in Connection with the Leading Tendencies of the Age: An Introductory Lecture, delivered at the Opening of the Free Church College, Aberdeen (Aberdeen: Geo. Davidson, 1852), 26-27. 124 See A. C. Fraser, “Logic and Metaphysics,” in Inauguration of the New College of the Free Church, Edinburgh: November, M.DCCC.L., 172-73. 125 Walter H. Conser, Jr., Church and Confession: Conservative Theologians in Germany, England, and America, 1815-1866 (Macon: Mercer UP, 1984) is a stimulating comparative study of the appropriation of romanticism for conservative theological ends. For the
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the romantic worldview had a liberalizing effect on the content and form of
doctrine and dogma.126 As a reviewer in the FC-influenced North British
Review, lamented:
The icy and rigid Rationalism of the last age has dissolved in the heat of a warmer season, and of late we have had a time of wading deep in melted matter, and now we are in an atmosphere of sultriness and dimness, of haziness and dreaminess… In the last age, certain of our ‘excelsior’ youths were like to be starved in cold; in this age, they are in great danger of having the seeds of a wasting disease fostered by lukewarm damps and gilded vapours.”127
Favoured metaphors of organic growth and germinal development
sometimes brooked little sympathy for the very idea of systematic doctrine—
“it is not with any particular expression or doctrine of the Westminster
Confession that I find fault,” wrote Edward Irving, “but with the general
structure of it”128—nor could they see binding doctrine as anything but
restrictive to growth. Could the numinous be expressed in mortal language,
least of all in propositions and dogmas? Did not creeds and confessions
overreach in daring to articulate a Mystery better plumbed by poets’ diction or
on an artist’s canvas?129 Some nineteenth-century Reformed theologians
worried that romantic Christians were surrendering doctrine to save
Christianity as a life force.130 The romantic priority to the heart often mutated
into sentimentalism. When it did, as among the Victorians, it muddied
doctrinal precision, faulted the intellectualism of the Greek metaphysics
underlying much catholic dogma, and tended to swap right belief about God
for tender feelings toward God. “Whether we are less religious than our
Mercersburg theology see Reformed Confessionalism in the Nineteenth-Century: Essays on the Thought of John Williamson Nevin, ed. Sam Hamstra, Jr. and Arie J. Griffioen (Lanham: The Scarecrow P, 1995). D. G. Hart, John Williamson Nevin: High Church Calvinist (Phillipsburg, NJ: P & R, 2005) tends to downplay Nevin’s debt to idealist and romantic motifs. 126 David Bebbington, The Dominance of Evangelicalism: The Age of Spurgeon and Moody (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2005), 148-83, and A. P. F. Sell, Theology in Turmoil: the Roots, Course and Significance of the Conservative-Liberal Debate in Modern Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1986), 11-38, document romanticism’s liberalizing effect. 127 Anonymous, “Article VI; Review of H. L. Mansel, The Limits of Religious Thought Examined,” in North British Review 30 (1859): 73. 128 Edward Irving, The Confessions of Faith and the Books of Discipline of the Church of Scotland of Date, Anterior to the Westminster Confession (London, n.p., 1831), cli. 129 See D. G. Hart, “Poems, Propositions and Dogma: The Controversy over Religious Language and the Demise of Theology in American Learning,” CH 57 (1988): 310-321. 130 Buchanan, “Systematic Theology,” 84; Hodge, Systematic Theology, 2: 42.
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fathers, we are certainly less theological,”131 noted the FC theologian J.
Oswald Dykes (1835-1912) at century’s end.
Similarly, the so-called turn to the subject, an aspect of romanticism
accorded status as a Leitmotif of modern theology by some interpreters of
nineteenth-century thought,132 when joined with a pantheistic or panentheistic
concept of divine immanence, shifted theological authority from the
commands of a transcendent God to the human participant in the divine.133
With human conscience quasi-divinized, revelation corresponded to the
psychological wants or moral aspirations of the believer, which accelerated the
moral critique of classical doctrine and dogma. This imperilled Reformed
theology, especially, whose doctrines of predestination and original sin
seemed harsh even to those from whom they commanded assent, and whose
all-powerful God trampled human freedom. As will become clearer in
chapters 3 and 4, holding doctrine accountable to the believer or church-in-
history practically effected its historicization, even when explicit theories of
doctrinal development were lacking and only implicit assumptions of moral
progress present.
Of signal importance is the central place romanticism and idealism
gave to the person of Christ. The incarnation pervaded nineteenth-century
theological reflection across the spectrum. The Congregationalist Robert Dale
(1829-95) drew a sharp contrast between the “old” and “new” evangelicalism:
[V]ery considerable import must be attributed to the great place which is now given to the fact of the Incarnation and to what the Incarnation reveals concerning the true and ideal relations between God and man. The leaders of the Evangelical movement believed with their whole heart that the Eternal Word…became flesh in our Lord Jesus Christ… But it was a common belief of Evangelicalism that the Incarnation was a kind of after-thought in the mind of God; that it was contingent upon sin…. But, according to the faith of modern Evangelicalism, it was God’s eternal thought and purpose that the race should be one with Christ… Our sin gave further occasion to a further
131 J. Oswald Dykes, “The Shorter Catechism in Relation to the Doctrines of Grace,” RARC 5 (1898): 8. 132 Claude Welch, Protestant Thought in the Nineteenth Century, Vol. 1 (New Haven: Yale UP, 1972), 60-61, finds proof for this anthropological turn among such diverse tendencies as Kierkegaard’s subjectivity, Newman’s illitative sense, Ritschl’s value judgments, and Troeltsch’s Christus pro nobis. See also A. C. McGiffert, The Rise of Modern Religious Ideas (New York: Macmillan, 1915), 279-310. 133 For romantic doctrines of God see John W. Cooper, Panentheism: The Other God of the Philosophers (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2007), 64-119.
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and still more wonderful revelation of the infinite love of God…that, even apart from the sin of the race, the Son of God would have shared the life of man, and man would have shared the life of God in him.134
The reasons behind the fundamental shift in Protestant theology from
Golgotha to Bethlehem to pursue theology according to a “Christological
method” are beyond my scope of examination.135 It can at least be noted,
however, that despite deep differences, Schleiermacher’s romanticism and the
idealist philosophies of Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel all centred on the union
of God and man in Jesus Christ as paradigmatic of the coincidence of the finite
and Infinite, and indicative of the essential unity of God and humanity. “I and
the Father are one,” spoke the Nazarene in John 10:30, the superlative gospel
according to Fichte, Schleiermacher, and Hegel.136 Current German theology,
noted the Presbyterian H. B. Smith (1815-77), saw humanity and divinity “as
capable of each other.”137 The incarnation—understood finitum capax
infinitum—promised to overcome dichotomies inherited from the
Enlightenment and, indeed, much earlier, between freedom and nature, subject
and object, the one and the many, creation and Creator. And as the quotation
from Dale indicates, considered from this perspective, the remedial economy
of classic Presbyterian theology appears to be highly deficient, riddled as it is
with dualities between God and sinner, grace and nature, free will and divine
sovereignty.
James Orr observed that since Schleiermacher, all the best theology has
centred on the person of Christ.138 But, as Orr’s confirmatory parade of
citations from Hegel, Schelling, Schleiermacher, Ritschl, Herrmann, and
others suggests, nineteenth-century theology’s giving priority to the person of
Christ did not guarantee the dominance of any particular type of theology, nor
would it for the study of the history of doctrine. Idealist Christology could wed 134 Dale, 45-46. 135 Shedd, Dogmatic Theology, 1: 5 (who is criticizing the departure from a Trinitarian format). Of course, the interest in the human Jesus of Nazareth and his non-dogmatic moral teaching awakened during Enlightenment continued to feed liberal and radical theologies in the nineteenth century. See Brown, Jesus, 161-238. 136 Brown, Jesus, 89-92. 137 Smith, System of Christian Theology, 343, ftn. 1. Smith, a German-trained Union Seminary professor, was another evangelical Presbyterian struggling with the historical construction of Christian doctrine. See W. K. B. Stoever, “Henry Boyton Smith and the German Theology of History,” USQR 24 (1968): 69-89. 138 James Orr, The Christian View of God and the World as Centring in the Incarnation (1893; reprint, Vancouver: Regent College P, 2001), 41, 389-90.
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an incremental view of the incarnation to notions of doctrinal development in
history in order to vindicate the logical process of dogmatic definition in
church history. Other theologians reached back behind the classical dogma of
Christ to recover the historical Jesus. As will become clear in chapters 4 and 5,
the centrality of Christ would impact how evangelical Presbyterians
approached the issue of doctrine and history, but the doctrine of incarnation’s
susceptibility to historical and philosophical pre-commitments would yield
very different results.
It is worth noting that while romantic tendencies became amplified
over the course of the nineteenth century, it was already present in Scottish
theology by the 1820s. A significant challenge to the hegemony of traditional
Presbyterian belief arose from a trio of brilliant theologians within the orbit of
the Scottish church who were indebted to continental romanticism: Edward
Irving (1792-1834),139 Thomas Erskine of Linlathen (1788-1870),140 and John
McLeod Campbell (1800-72).141 These disgruntled sons of Scottish Calvinism
were not of one mind in all matters theological, and their own legacies varied.
What stands out of great significance was their preoccupation with the person
of Christ. Although Barthian theologians find resonance with their theology
and its critique of confessional Calvinism,142 historians typically highlight the
139 Irving pastored in London until his meteoric career fizzled out in deposition, and premature death. His premillennialism, high-church proclivities, and recourse to Presbyterianism’s catholic heritage point to the influence of romanticism (Tulloch, Movements of Religious Thought in Britain during the Nineteenth Century, 156-66; Bebbington, The Dominance of Evangelicalism, 184-214). Graham McFarlane, Edward Irving: The Trinitarian Face of God (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1996) provides a theological introduction to Irving. 140 Erskine, an Episcopalian who spent most of his life on the fringes of the C of S, was an acolyte of Coleridge. His interpretation of Scripture and doctrine through intuition and the light of conscience left him repulsed by Reformed theology: he rejoiced in God’s fatherhood of all rather than stingy grace to a few, and through an organic notion of Christ’s headship he advocated a pardon of humanity in Christ that veered toward apokatastasis. See N. R. Needham, Thomas Erskine of Linlathen: His Life and Theology, 1788-1832 (Edinburgh: Rutherford House, 1990). 141 Campbell’s pastoral experience with parishioners starved of an assurance of God’s love led him to challenge the Confession’s teaching on election and assurance. Like Irving, he was tried for heresy, although his influence only increased with the 1856 publication of The Nature of the Atonement, an innovative and still-influential dogmatic treatment of the atonement that sought the rationale of the cross in love, not law, by making the Father’s love prior to his retributive justice or wounded honour. 142 E.g. Torrance, Scottish Theology, 287-320; James B. Torrance, “The Contribution of McLeod Campbell to Scottish Theology,” SJT 26 (1973): 295-311; Michael Jinkins, Love is of the Essence: An Introduction to the Theology of John McLeod Campbell (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1993).
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congruence of their ideas with what would become liberal Protestantism.143
Not only does the experience of salvation loom large, it provides considerable
justification for dismissing the classical Reformed doctrine of the atonement
as a penal substitution and for revising the doctrine of God. Further, the
rejection of “limited atonement” was the result of fresh—and in Irving’s case,
creative—attempts to rethink the atonement through the incarnation so that the
forensic aspect paled in significance to the union of man and God in Jesus
Christ. Not only, then, was a significant challenge lodged against traditional
Presbyterian doctrine that would demand revisiting over the next decades, it is
apparent that by the 1820s elements indebted to continental romanticism were
percolating within the Scottish church that could abet the process of
approaching Christian doctrine from an historical perspective.
[1.4.6] Otto Pfleiderer deemed the rejection of this trio’s liberalizing
approach to God, incarnation, and atonement to have retarded British theology
for the next half-century. But it was not, as he implies, mere recalcitrance
behind the hesitation to take up their gauntlet. A ‘total war’ mentality gripped
the C of S soon after the heresy trials of McLeod Campbell and Irving. At
stake was the spiritual freedom of the church; at issue was the old sore of lay
patronage; the fulcrum of this “Ten Years’ Conflict” was a combination of
social, political and theological factors.144 British church leaders were
increasingly aware that the state churches were poorly equipped to respond to
their nation’s rapid industrialization. Not only did urbanization render the old
parish system obsolete and heft considerable financial burden onto the
churches to provide houses of worship in the booming cities, dissenting
congregations were swelling as the lower and middle classes discarded
established religion as a prop of the crumbling old order. Attempts were made
to renew Britain’s established churches, especially by rejuvenating the parish
143 E.g. Otto Pfleiderer, The Development of Theology in Germany since Kant, and its Progress in Great Britain since 1825 (London: Sonnenschein, 1890), 445; Vernon F. Storr, The Development of English Theology in the Nineteenth Century (London: Longman, Green, & Co., 1913), 424-28; B. M. G. Reardon, Religious Thought in the Victorian Age: A Survey from Coleridge to Gore, 2nd ed. (London: Longman, 1995), 293-303; Jan Rohls, Protestantische Theologie der Neuzeit, Vol. 1 (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1997), 626-27. 144 Kenneth R. Ross, “Ten Years’ Conflict (1834-43),” DSCHT, 816-17; Arvel B. Erickson, “The Non-Intrusionist Controversy in Scotland, 1832-1843,” CH 11 (1942): 302-325.
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system.145 In the C of S, the indomitable Thomas Chalmers (1780-1847)
brought his own program for reform from his Glasgow parish to the national
stage as leader of the evangelical party and professor at St. Andrews and
Edinburgh.146 Chalmers hoped evangelical parishes empowered to redeem
bodies and souls could alleviate Scotland’s problems; of course, such parishes
could come about only when evangelical ministers could be secured over
lackadaisical moderates. His reform project was steeped in the myth of John
Knox’s theocratic, covenanted Scotland. It prized the church’s spiritual
freedom yet sought the nation’s weal with resources only an established
church possessed, even as it failed to account for the altered political
landscape in which the established churches’ status and privilege were being
pared down.147 When the confident evangelical party managed to occupy
positions of influence within the apparatus of the Assembly and church at
large, they began to enact programs to renew parishes and, ultimately,
Scotland. An 1834 Veto Act was part of this plan, alleviating patronage’s
worst ills by making the congregation’s vote decisive.
The Ten Year Conflict broke when a candidate who had been
presented to an unwilling congregation by a patron, but was rejected by
presbytery on the authority of the Veto Act, appealed. In 1837 the Court of
Session sided with the claimant and vehemently struck down the Veto Act as
unconstitutional, declaring the notion that a church could regulate itself under
Christ’s sole rule “the most pernicious error by which the blessed truths of
Christianity can be perverted.”148 The C of S was deemed an appendage of the
state. Petitions to London were of no avail: preference for an establishment
principle construed along the lines of the C of E, general ignorance of Scottish
145 Stewart J. Brown’s impressive The National Churches of England, Ireland, and Scotland, 1801-1846 (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2001) provides a wealth of social, political, and religious statistics. 146 On Chalmers see Stewart J. Brown, Thomas Chalmers and the Godly Commonwealth in Scotland (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1982). 147 The benefit of hindsight sees this project bound somewhat to the idealising of bonny old Britain’s parish-life as touted by romantic poets, and based on the naïve individualism typical of evangelical social thought. See Stewart J. Brown, “Reform, Reconstruction, Reaction: The Social Vision of Scottish Presbyterians c. 1830-c. 1930,” SJT 44 (1991): 489-517. Pressured by powerful Protestant and Irish Catholic dissent lobbies, Westminster removed political disabilities first on non-established Protestants (1828 Repeal of Tests and Corporations Act), then on Roman Catholics (1829 Catholic Emancipation Act), and further undermined the old social order by extending the franchise to non-propertied classes (1832 Reform Act). 148 Cited without reference in Burleigh, 342.
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affairs, and suspicion of evangelical insubordination toward the established
order left Westminster largely unsympathetic. Faced with intractable
opposition and a revived moderate party, the popular party—not without
controversy—resolved to eradicate patronage rather than simply curb it. When
their desperate “Claim of Right” (1842) demanding the repeal of patronage
stalled in the House of Lords, many in the evangelical party forsook the C of S
in a dramatic, pre-orchestrated manoeuvre during the 1843 General Assembly.
Thronged by cheering crowds, the “non-intrusionists” marched from the
Assembly to rented facilities and there constituted itself as the C of S, Free.
This “Disruption” (as it came to be known) was a church schism on an
unprecedented scale: the Swiss theologian Karl Hagenbach declared it “the
most remarkable religious event of the century.”149 Approximately 450
ministers abandoned manse, pulpit, and stipend over the principle of the crown
rights of Jesus Christ. One-third of the membership of the C of S joined them,
including majorities in Aberdeen, Glasgow, Edinburgh, and the Highlands.
The FC aggrandized itself as a national church, undertaking in spiritual
freedom what the established church did in servitude to the state, and hastily
tried to make good that boast. Within a few years, from scratch, monies were
gathered, churches built, and the rudiments laid for a nation-wide parochial
school system. The Mound in Edinburgh was soon crowned by New College,
emblematizing both the FC’s ambitious evangelical mandate to pulsate the
gospel from the heart of Scotland and its Reformed commitment to theological
scholarship in the promotion and defence of Christian doctrine. D’Aubingé
concluded breathlessly after meeting Chalmers and sitting in on the 1845
General Assembly that the infant denomination “is perhaps destined at the
present period to be the vanguard of Christ’s army,” an observation that
coheres with much FC self-opinion.150
To comprehend the theological developments that would unfold in this
denomination that are pertinent to my study, two points need to be made to
dissuade against quick dismissals of the FC as either fanatically evangelical or
immutably Calvinist. Such a verdict could be derived from the sharp-toned
149 Karl Hagenbach, A Text-Book of the History of Doctrines, trans. H. B. Smith (New York: Sheldon and Co., 1862), §285. 150 D’Aubingé, Germany, England, and Scotland; or, Recollections of a Swiss Minister, 120.
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pamphleteering and invective Assembly-floor debates during the Ten Year’s
Conflict, but the frequent recourse to Bible and Confession which give rise to
this interpretation really signify not so much a blinkered biblicism or
confessionalism as the fact that both gospel and Confession were perceived to
be at the heart of the evangelical-moderate debate and were, therefore, heavily
cited. It is misleading to speak of “intransigent dogmatism”151 in connection
with evangelical Presbyterianism if what is meant is that the FC was bigoted
and obscurantist. And Alec Vidler’s contention that the FC spliced themselves
from mainstream Scottish culture and church life in 1843 to remain “narrowly
and rigidly Calvinist” is patently false.152 More accurately, Hagenbach
observed that the early FC united loyalty to catholic creeds and Protestant
confessions with open, questioning scholarship.153 At its inception, the
majority in the FC combined strict adherence to catholic and Reformed
doctrines with liberal political opinions and breadth of interest. Without being
slavish to the Confession—Chalmers and Cunningham both thought it too
long and minutely detailed154—they were committed to it as a living
expression of Biblical truth, though not yet questioning its substantial
doctrines or, like the churches born of the eighteenth century secessions,
conceding the historical conditions affecting its doctrines.
Indeed, neither the FC nor the UPs was a conservative church as
understood in nineteenth-century terms, in other words, keen to defend a
paternalistic worldview against the encroachments of the state and the
dissenting religion, “homesick”—as Benedetto Crocce characterized the
romantic pathos—for the old ways of a Christian Europe defaced by
urbanization, industrialization, and social upheaval.155 An evangelical
inheritance and its upwardly mobile constituency tempered their allegiance to
traditional doctrine and primitivist ecclesiology with a progressive and liberal
151 Drummond and Bulloch, The Church in Victorian Scotland 1843-1874 (Edinburgh: Saint Andrew P, 1975), 19. Drummond and Bulloch toss “fundamentalist” at persons and groups in the eighteen and nineteenth centuries as if the term was both self-explanatory and not grossly anachronistic. 152 A. R. Vidler, The Church in an Age of Revolution: 1789 to the Present Day (London: Penguin, 1971), 61-62. 153 Hagenbach, A Text-Book of the History of Doctrines, §285. 154 Noted by James Lachlan MacLeod, “Revision of the Westminster Confession of Faith and the Free Church of Scotland’s Declaratory Act of 1892,” in The Westminster Confession into the 21st Century, ed. J. Ligon Duncan (Fearn: Christian Focus, 2003), 345. 155 Cited in Nigg, 156.
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outlook.156 As deliberately evangelical bodies, the FC and UPs were, in fact,
more outward looking than the broad-church moderates in the C of S, for they
were connected to worldwide evangelicalism and Reformed churches on the
Continent and in America. However useful it might be for tidy analysis, the
retention of a conservative-liberal theological grid will prove misleading for
understanding nineteenth-century Scottish Presbyterianism, given its mottled
theological heritage, the manifold social and political traits of its parentage,
and the cultural-social make-up of the people who filled its pews and pulpits.
1.5. Conclusion
My analysis of the historicizing of doctrine among evangelical
Presbyterians in nineteenth-century Scotland presupposes the textured
background sketched in this chapter. Various influences were at work in the
genesis and process of their historical study of church teaching, some waning,
some waxing, some of them incompatible. Traditional evangelical and
Presbyterian convictions of Scripture’s perfection and the normative status of
the New Testament-era church, formed and fixed since the Reformation,
would disparage “development” as a disingenuous prop of Roman Catholic
ecclesiology and “tradition” as the antithesis of the gospel. The growing
awareness in the early nineteenth century—much of it received then only in
wisps as rumour and hearsay—that German divinity combined an irreverent
approach to sacred history with views of a notion of development as progress
beyond classical formulations of the faith, again did little to endear the concept
of doctrinal development in history to British theologians. That said, the
Reformation had stripped off the divine veil from the human face of the
church, committing Presbyterians in principle to criticism of doctrine upon the
word of God, a tendency strengthened by the growth of evangelicalism in the
eighteenth-century, concomitant with its epistemological inclinations. The
secessionist Presbyterian bodies bore both of these pregnant principles. And
all Presbyterians prided themselves on the doctrinal muscle of their tradition,
which meant that the historical interrogation of dogmatic or doctrinal origins
156 The jumbling of conservative and liberal tendencies within evangelicalism is brought out well in Stewart J. Brown, “Movements of Christian Awakening in Revolutionary Europe, 1790-1815,” in The Cambridge History of Christianity, 7: 575-95.
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and development gathering strength since the seventeenth century simply
could not be ignored.
Further, British churches were reeling from the social, industrial,
political, and intellectual upheaval underway in the Victorian era. Change,
development, even revolution, was coming to be a fact of life. “Look wherever
you will, revolution has come upon us,” roared Thomas Carlyle in his 1866
inaugural address as rector of the University of Edinburgh.
All kinds of things are coming to be subjected to fire, as it were…. Curious to see how, in Oxford and other places that used to seem as lying at anchor in the stream of time, regardless of all changes, they are getting into the highest humour of mutation, and all sorts of new ideas are afloat. It is evident that whatever is not inconsumable, made of asbestos, will have to be burnt…157
How asbestine was ‘the faith once delivered’? Romanticism was inculcating a
taste for history among Victorians. But Clio would not be satiated with gothic
nostalgia—she had totalitarian aims, and picking up the earlier critical stances
toward church doctrine that had wheedled their way through the
Enlightenment, a growing historical consciousness began pushing questions of
origins, development, and telos onto ecclesiology and church dogmatics. The
next chapter deals with William Cunningham, who stood resolutely against
this trend.
157 Thomas Carlyle, Inaugural Address at Edinburgh University, April 2nd 1866, by Thomas Carlyle, on Being Installed as Rector of the University there (Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas, 1866), 41-42.
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Chapter 2
William Cunningham, John Henry Newman, and the Development of Doctrine
“The historian looks backwards; at last he also believes backwards.” - Friedrich Nietzsche1 2.1. Introduction In 1876 John Henry Newman received several Scottish admirers to the
Oratory of St. Philip Neri in Birmingham. Remarkably, these pilgrims to the
soon-to-be cardinal were loyal sons of the FC of Scotland, and included
among them Marcus Dods and the eminent preacher Alexander Whyte.2 They
sought out Newman not for dispute or debate but to pay homage to a man
who, having outlasted the rancour of his early life, had come to be esteemed
even among Protestants in late Victorian Britain for the graceful style and
pervasive sense of eternity—so redolent of a more faithful, less material,
age—of his novels, poems, and sermons.3 Newman charmed his visitors by
recounting to them how, in 1844, having received a handsome sum of money
as a birthday gift, he visited a local bookseller with the aim of purchasing a
recently advertised Acta Sanctorum. To his dismay, he was mere hours too
late—an order for the costly sixty-volume set had just been telegraphed in
from a Rev. William Cunningham on behalf of the library of the New College
of the upstart FC. This incident could only heighten Newman’s estimation of
his visitors’ ecclesiastical pedigree. “‘But gentlemen, is not your Church a
very learned and open-minded Church?’”4
1 Friedrich Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols, trans. R. J. Hollingdale (London: Penguin, 1968), 25. 2 The famous hymn writer Horatius Bonar (1808-1889) was another FC enthusiast for Newman. And according to William Blaikie, David Brown, D.D. (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1898), 234-49, David Brown of the FC College in Aberdeen corresponded with Newman during the 1870s and 80s. 3 Among others, W. Robertson Nicoll, Princes of the Church (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1921), 28-29, thinks the elderly Newman achieved national stature less for reasons theological then personal and literary. 4 Recounted by G. F. Barbour, The Life of Alexander Whyte, D.D. (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1923), 194-96.
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This 1844 incident seems a portent. Two years later Cunningham
assailed Newman’s An Essay on the Development of Doctrine in a published
review.5 In a sense, the second “encounter” between Newman and
Cunningham also centred on the Acta Sanctorum. After all, that landmark
work of Bollandist erudition was both a result and embodiment of sixteenth
and seventeenth-century debates between Protestants and Catholics over the
nature of Scripture, tradition, and church, in which each side contested the
other’s claim of fidelity with the doctrines of Scripture and historical and
theological continuity with early Christian tradition (see 1.2.3). This chapter
will largely concern itself with explicating Cunningham’s assessment of
Newman’s Essay as being the onset of a problem which taxed Victorian
Presbyterianism, namely, the recognition that Christian doctrine was (in some
way) implicated in history. Yet, it finds one foot of this consummately modern
problem still standing in the seventeenth century. For Cunningham’s critique
of Newman’s theory of development took place within the theological
parameters of the seventeenth-century status quaestionis. Indeed, his is
probably the most able criticism of the Essay from the position of classical
Protestant theology.6
Two things are especially apparent in his challenge to Newman’s
theory. First, while Newman may have found his way into the church of the
Bollandists on the very same grounds for which they contended—that
contemporary Rome is the church of the apostles and fathers—he did not enter
via a path they or any other Catholic had laid. By blazing his own trail into the
Church of Rome, he helped push the idea of the historical evolution of
doctrine onto the agenda of Victorian theology. Second, while the venerable
debate between Catholics and Protestants over Scripture, tradition, and
doctrine, resisted superannuation by Newman’s theory, Cunningham’s
rejoinder exposed the traditional Reformed and evangelical position as
vulnerable to what many nineteenth-century theologians were increasingly
convinced were history’s rights. Cunningham’s response, then, became as 5 Published in 1846 in the North British Review, and republished as the “Romanist Theory of Development,” in Discussions on Church Principles: Popish, Erastian and Presbyterian (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1863), 35-77. 6 Scholarship has largely focused on Newman’s Roman and C of E critics: C. G. Brown, “Newman’s Minor Critics,” DR 89 (1971): 13-21; David Nicholls, “Newman’s Anglican Critics,” ATR 47 (1965): 372-395.
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much a part of the ‘problem’ of dogma and history for his tradition as
Newman’s Essay itself.
After summarizing Cunningham’s critique of the Essay, then
expanding and clarifying his views on the relation of doctrine to Scripture and
tradition in light of his magnum opus, Historical Theology, a glance at some of
his occasional pieces on doctrinal development within the Reformed tradition
will underscore the scholastic legacy on evangelical Reformed thinking about
the historical formation of doctrine. First, however, Cunningham himself
warrants a quick introduction, especially as certain biographical details
illuminate personal and theological traits that were very much operative in his
dispute with Newman.
2.2. William Cunningham (1805-61)7
Cunningham entered the University of Edinburgh in the 1820s a
convinced Tory and moderate, but finished the arts course an ardent
evangelical of vintage Calvinist persuasion. As a theologue, he displayed the
precocity of intellect and bellicosity of character that marked his mature
career, taking an active part in student debates over slavery and the Apocrypha
controversy, and intently studying historic Protestant-Catholic polemical
literature. “If my life is spared,” he wrote at this time, “it will be spent in
controversy, I believe.”8 Indeed, he became embroiled in controversy during
his first pastorate at Greenock. Glossalia and suspect teaching were sprouting
in the region, the seeds of which were sown by the minister of a neighbouring
region, John McLeod Campbell (see 1.4.5). When McLeod Campbell chanced
to preach in a nearby church, Cunningham jotted down notes of a sermon
7 On Cunningham see Robert Rainy and James Mackenzie, The Life of William Cunningham, D.D. (London: T. Nelson and Sons, 1871); Rudolph Ehrlich, “The Church in the Teaching of Principal William Cunningham (1805-1861),” (Ph.D. diss., University of Edinburgh, 1952); Donald MacLeod, “Cunningham, William (1805-61),” DSTCH, 229-231; Joel Beeke, “William Cunningham,” in Historians of the Christian Tradition, ed. Michael Bauman and Martin I. Klauber (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 1995), 209-226; Sandy Finlayson, “William Cunningham—Theologian,” in Unity and Diversity: The Founders of the Free Church of Scotland (Fearn: Christian Focus, 2010), 83-107; especially Michael W. Honeycutt, “William Cunningham: His Life, Thought, and Controversies,” (Ph.D. diss., University of Edinburgh, 2002). Aspects of his thought are treated by Toon, The Development of Doctrine in the Church (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1979), 25-33, and A. C. Cheyne, “Church History in Edinburgh, c. 1840-1990,” in Studies in Scottish Church History (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1999), 267-69. 8 Cited in Rainy and Mackenzie, 32.
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propounding universal atonement that were later used as evidence in his
heresy trial. Such punctiliousness for confessional orthodoxy gained him
exposure in the wider church, and a call to a large Edinburgh parish was
forthcoming; it has also contributed, no doubt, to his disparagement by many
current scholars as a sort of Calvinist grand inquisitor.
As a pastor in the capital city, Cunningham launched himself into the
foremost church controversies of the day: Roman Catholicism and church
patronage. Anti-Catholic sentiment was rife in mid-century Britain.9
Legislative concessions to Catholics, the impoverished Irish swelling the
cities, and the papacy’s aggrandizement triggered Protestant fears of Babylon
rising. Cunningham earned laurels as a formidable controversialist through
public lectures and the 1845 republication of Bishop Stillingfleet’s The
Doctrine and Practices of the Church of Rome Truly Represented (1686),10
with glosses that often surpass the text in length and vitriol. He hated Rome as
the masterpiece of Satan: the absolute syncretism of Christianity and
paganism, whose religious idolatry and political tyranny demanded exposure
and refutation. But unlike many contemporaries (including most Tractarians)
however he supported Catholic emancipation; he also never doubted that there
were true Christians within Rome or that it still possessed Christian
fundamentals.11 He held it an opponent worthy of the deepest respect, and
encouraged—as iron sharpens iron—his students to master the opera of a
Bellarmine or a Baronius.12 Given his mastery of post-Reformation polemical
theology and alarm over Rome’s waxing strength, he surely whetted his epée
upon the news of the publication of the Essay.
Cunningham was also among the most vociferous and articulate critics
of patronage during the Ten Year’s Conflict. His Defence of the Rights of the
Christian People (1840) defended the Veto Act by pushing well beyond the C
9 J. R. Wolffe, “Anti-Catholic Societies,” DSCHT, 17-18; MacLeod, The Second Disruption, 22-25. The papal bull Universalis Ecclesiae (1850) restored the Roman Catholic hierarchy in Britain. 10 Edward Stillingfleet, The Doctrine and Practices of the Church of Rome Truly Represented, ed. William Cunningham (1686; reprint, Edinburgh: Johnstone, 1845). 11 Cunningham, Speech Delivered at the Meeting Against Papal Aggression, held in the Music Hall, George Street, Edinburgh, December 5th, 1850 (Edinburgh: Johnstone and Hunter, 1850), 10-11. 12 Cardinal Baronius (1538-1607) wrote the Annales in reply to the Magdeburg Centuries. Most Protestants considered St. Robert Bellarmine (1542-1621) to be the most formidable apologist of the Catholic Reformation.
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of S evangelical status quo, asserting congregational rights and the popular
election of clergy with a litany of citations from the Bible, fathers, and
reformers (see 1.4.6).13 This period makes explicit his obsession with the
doctrine of the church.14 That evangelical Presbyterians in Scotland assumed
the centripetal place of the church in the divine economy, and contended for
its spiritual freedom, purity of doctrine, and primitive constitution, indicates
that they shared with the otherwise opposite Tractarians a perception that the
church was under threat from the social and political changes afoot in
Victorian society, as well as the obtrusive theological legacies of the previous
century. Consequently, both parties committed themselves to ecclesiological
renewal, however their specific diagnoses of the problems facing the church
and solutions needed differed. If Cunningham’s ecclesiology assumed the
confessional Protestant form appropriate to his heritage, his Victorian context
made it a preoccupation.
When the initial FC General Assembly called for the immediate
erection of a new college for Reformed and evangelical scholarship and the
preparation of ministers, Cunningham, who had been awarded a doctorate
honoris causa from Princeton in 1842, was made a junior professor at New
College.15 He was then issued to America to investigate and assess seminary
models there, as well as to cultivate support for the infant FC. A stimulating
friendship with Princeton’s Charles Hodge was an ancillary but important
outcome of this trip. In 1845 the Assembly transferred him to church history,
and upon Chalmers’ death in 1847 he served additionally as New College’s
principal until his death in 1861.
As confessional Reformed theology is out of sorts with contemporary
theology, Cunningham has been largely forgotten when not consigned to
13 Cunningham, Defence of the Rights of the Christian People in the Appointment of Ministers, from the Constitutional Standards of the Church of Scotland (Edinburgh: Johnstone, 1840). Cunningham was instrumental in spurring the popular party to reject patronage outright rather than be content to curb its evils. 14 This is recognized especially in the dissertations by Ehrlich and Honeycutt. 15 Chalmers, New College’s first principal, envisioned a university of superlative evangelical and Reformed scholarship, able to counter the threats to orthodoxy and Scottish Realism emanating especially from Germany. The dream never materialized, but it was still partially in sight in Cunningham’s “Address Delivered at the Opening of the New College,” in Inauguration of the New College of the Free Church, Edinburgh: November, M.DCCC.L, 39-58. On New College’s founding see Stewart J. Brown, “The Disruption and the Dream: the Making of the New College 1843-1861,” in Disruption to Diversity: Edinburgh Divinity 1846-1996, ed. David F. Wright and Gary D. Badcock (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1996), 29-50.
72
ignominy. As a result, interpretations of this forceful high Presbyterian risk
caricature or calumny.16 I would caution against confusing his fervent
evangelical and Reformed convictions with theological antiquarianism, or his
admittedly parochial outlook with closed-mindedness. Even his undutiful
students remarked upon his openness to new ideas and willingness to linger
over a difficult item of theology.17 He was among the last Scottish theologians
not obligated to learn German—he was also among the last Scotch
Presbyterians of his century to prefer a visit to Dordrecht over Berlin!—but he
was not oblivious to modern thought. He followed German theology in
translation or in Latin.18 It pained him that Scotland lagged behind Germany in
the study of the Bible’s text and history, so with evangelical confidence that
the problem with much German divinity was not the critical tools in their
hands but the infidel presuppositions of their hearts, he pushed for the
establishment of a chair in critical exegesis at New College. Moreover, the
British and Foreign Evangelical Review, which he edited from 1855-1860,
was an important medium for introducing into Britain evangelical scholarship
from the Continent and America as well as, through book reviews, avant-
garde German and Dutch divinity.19
2.3. An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine The writing of the Essay in 1845 climaxed Newman’s lengthy, often
anguished, search for the nineteenth-century whereabouts of the ancient
church.20 Newman himself tells us that near journey’s end he determined to
16 E.g. Drummond and Bulloch’s assessment in The Church in Victorian Scotland 1843-1874, 17-19. 17 E.g. James Strahan, Andrew Bruce Davidson, D.D. (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1917), 57. 18 He especially made use of the Halle professor J. A. L. Wegscheider’s Institutiones theologiae christianae dogmaticae (1815). Rohls, Protestantische Theologie der Neuzeit, 1:391-99, notes that Wegscheider’s contemporaries considered the Institutiones to be the standard textbook of neologist divinity. 19 J. A. H. Dempster, “British and Foreign Evangelical Review,” DSCHT, 95-96. 20 On Newman’s life see David Newsome, The Convert Cardinals: John Henry Newman and Henry Edward Manning (London: John Murray, 1993); Ian Ker, John Henry Newman: A Biography; more concisely, Sheridan Gilley, “Newman, John Henry (1801-1890),” TRE 24, 416-422. While I find much of the psychohistory in Frank Turner’s controversial John Henry Newman: The Challenge to Evangelical Religion (New Haven: Yale UP, 2002) rather speculative (e.g. 110-161, 631-37), by refusing to read Newman’s Anglican period through the Apologia, he has recovered the anti-Protestant streak in Newman’s thought he later sought to obscure. Some of Turner’s conclusions are reaffirmed by Kenneth J. Stewart, “Newman
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write an essay on the development of doctrine to test a hypothesis; if satisfied
with the outcome, he would seek reception into the Church of Rome.21
According to Cunningham, however, the Essay was the inevitable terminus of
a wrong turn taken when the classical Protestant position on the sufficiency of
Scripture and its regulative authority for church doctrine was rejected for what
Tractarians called “Antiquity,” that is, the necessary mediation of scriptural
teaching by the doctrinal consensus of the early church. This was the taproot
of all Newman’s errors, and it comprised the first of a three-pronged assault on
the former Oxford don’s argument for the historical development of Christian
doctrine. Cunningham’s second prong aimed at the fact that Newman’s new
fangled theory of development, with which he sought to further secure the
priority of church tradition over Scripture, incongruously burst the banks of
Rome’s long-held position on the character of tradition and the sources of
doctrine, even as he used the theory to endorse the selfsame church. So much
for the vaunted continuity of Roman tradition! Third, the hazy connection
between revelation, doctrine, and development in the Essay ultimately
implicated Newman’s theory as not just non-Roman but infidel. Newman
travelled to Rome via Germany.
Before proceeding to look at Newman’s theory of development proper
(prong 2 and 3) along with Cunningham’s appraisal, it is essential to linger a
while over his accusation that Newman and his Oxford cohorts had taken over
Rome’s grossly deficient doctrine of Scripture (prong 1). For the black/white
Scripture-tradition grid of post-Reformation theology not only determined
Cunningham’s assessment of the Tractarian movement as inherently “popish,”
even more importantly it left him wholly unsympathetic to those difficulties
that Newman keenly felt to incur when the historical, i.e. visible, life of the
church is taken earnestly—difficulties, as we shall see, that moved Newman’s
mind from the authority of “Antiquity” to the development of dogma, and
therefore shifted his ecclesiastical allegiance from Canterbury to Rome. But
yesteryear’s theological polemics obscured for Cunningham what Newman
against Newman: The Apologia pro vita sua of 1864 and Subsequent Autobiographical Writings Compared,” SBET 26 (2008): 57-67. 21 Newman, Apologia pro vita sua (1864/65; reprint, Oxford: Oxford UP, 1913), 318-26.
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came to see as the issue of the day: how to reconcile the continuity of church
doctrine with discrepancies in its historical record.
[2.3.1] The Tractarian movement was the progeny of seventeenth and
eighteenth-century high church Anglicanism, and the sibling of romantic
movements of theological restoration like neo-Lutheranism and the
Mercersburg theology (see 1.4.5). It distanced itself from its kin, however,
through a virulent anti-Protestantism that found expression, especially, in a
disavowal of the Protestant understanding of the sufficiency of Scripture.22
“Bible religion” as Newman called it, scorned the churchly process by which
Christians are initiated into the faith. Swapping the church’s stewardship of
the apostolic faith for the lonely individual and his Bible, Protestants had
recourse only to the whims of private judgement to ascertain that faith, rather
than the weight of catholic tradition.23 Moreover, sola scriptura cohered with
neither historical fact nor actual evangelical practice. As to the former,
because “the full tradition of Christianity existed before the Christian
Scriptures,” the C of E was in concert with early church practice by
maintaining doctrines like the Trinity, infant baptism, or the sacrifice of the
mass that were not obvious in the Bible, but apostolic nonetheless by virtue of
their antiquity and subsequent preservation through apostolic succession.24 As
to the latter, Newman shrewdly insisted that evangelicals “cannot consistently
object against a person who believes more than they do, unless they cease to
believe just as much as they do.”25 In other words, sola scriptura, the
Protestant hammer used to smash Tractarian peculiarities, could just as easily
be turned against their doctrines like the civil establishment of religion or the
divinity of the Holy Spirit.
22 On Tractarianism see especially Owen Chadwick, The Spirit of the Oxford Movement: Tractarian Essays (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1990); Peter Nockles, The Oxford Movement in Context: Anglican High Churchmanship 1760-1857 (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1994). 23 Newman’s The Arians of the Fourth Century (1833) argued that it was Arius who appealed directly to the Scriptures to overrule traditional belief about Jesus Christ. Cited in the anthology edited by Owen Chadwick, The Mind of the Oxford Movement (London: Adam & Charles Black, 1960), 146-47. 24 John Keble, cited in The Mind of the Oxford Movement, 126-30. 25 Newman, “No. 85. Lectures on the Scriptural Proofs of the Doctrines of the Church,” in Tracts for the Times. By Members of the University of Oxford. Volume 5 (London: J. G. F. & J. Rivington, 1840), 3.
75
Tractarians sought a via media between Protestant and Roman
extremes: the full coherence of Scripture and tradition in the doctrine and
practices of the early church, as established by Vincent’s canon (see 1.2.1).
“As we accord to the Protestant sectary, that Scripture is the inspired treasury
of the whole faith,” Newman wrote, “but maintain that his doctrines are not in
Scripture, so we agree with the Romanist in appealing to Antiquity, but deny
that his doctrines are not to be found in Antiquity.” Scripture contains all
doctrines necessary for salvation—there is no supplementary tradition as
maintained by Rome—but the doctrines therein are not perspicuous, and must
be identified and authorized by the Vincentian canon.26 Rejecting evangelical
bibliolatry, Tractarians affirmed the church under the historic episcopate as the
authoritative source and teacher of Christian doctrine, with the Bible
functioning as the “document of appeal” for its lex orandi and lex credendi.27
This forestalled Roman appeals beyond Scripture and still avoided the “non-
descript system of religion now in fashion, that nothing is to be believed but
what is clearly in Scripture.”28 The cacophony of Protestant interpretations of
the Bible and the hubris of the papacy were silenced by the voice of a tradition
that was catholic, apostolic, and episcopal but not Roman.29
Along with trouncing the popular evangelical understanding of
Scripture, the early Tractarians garnered notoriety for their sacramental
realism, clericalism, and insistence on the C of E’s unbroken connection with
the apostolic church through the episcopal office. It is important to note here
the close alignment in the via media between the doctrine of Scripture and the
doctrine of the church visible. To bring light and order to the teaching of the
Bible, Tractarians looked to the unadulterated church of the early centuries as
the visible embodiment of perpetually valid liturgical and doctrinal standards.
The Tractarians were insisting upon a necessary connection between the
visible church and the historical church that was at odds with the generic
evangelical priority to the invisible church. Indeed, the Tractarians were
26 Newman, Lectures on the Prophetical Office of the Church, Viewed Relatively to Romanism and Popular Protestantism (London: J. G. & F. Rivington, 1837), 47, 369-70. 27 Newman, “No. 85. Lectures on the Scriptural Proofs of the Doctrines of the Church,” 14, 25; Lectures on the Prophetical Office of the Church, 343. 28 Newman, “No. 85. Lectures on the Scriptural Proofs of the Doctrines of the Church,” 25; see also 5-9. 29 See Newman, Lectures on the Prophetical Office of the Church, 24, 158-223.
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utterly aghast at the ecclesiastical promiscuity of Anglican evangelicals who
joined themselves to a motley crew of Dissenters in all sorts of ecumenical
ventures and societies so long as all parties involved pledged themselves to the
supposedly clear and simple teachings of the Bible.30
Newman wrote to a C of E evangelical who had criticized his
seemingly exclusivist emphasis on the church visible:
You argue, that true doctrine is the important matter for which we must contend, and a right state of the affections is the test of vital religion in the heart: and you ask, ‘Why may I not be satisfied if my Creed is correct, and my affections spiritual? Have I not in that case enough to evidence a renewed mind, and to constitute a basis of union with others like minded? The love of CHRIST is surely the one and only requisite for Christian communion here, and the joys of heaven hereafter.’
But it is not enough, he vehemently maintained. “[T]he Visible Church is not a
voluntary association of the day, but a continuation of one which existed in the
age before us, and then again in the age before that; and so back till we come
to the age of the Apostles.”31 Christians who took themselves out of the C of E
were no longer in visible communion with the ancient catholic and apostolic
church. Dissenters were not exactly outside the pale of salvation—Newman
likened Presbyterian Scotland to “Ephraim under the Law”, which at least had
“the school of the Prophets”32—but neither could they be considered as
belonging to the true church. The invisible church of the Victorian pan-
evangelical consensus, by eschewing the visible C of E, lacked historical
continuity with the ancient church and, as such, was less than fully real.
Yale historian Frank Turner remarked upon Newman’s “scorched-earth
policy” toward the Protestant understanding of the Bible during his Anglican
days. Scripture’s inconsistencies and difficulties were exploited and
juxtaposed against the clear and purposeful dogmas of the early church;
myriad interpretations of the Bible were relieved by the unanimity of
30 See G. F. A. Best, “The Evangelicals and the Established Church in the Early Nineteenth Century,” JTS 10 (1959): 63-78. 31 Newman, “No. 11. The Visible Church. Letter I & II,” Tracts for the Times, Vol. 1 (London: J. G. & F. Rivington, 1834), 1, 3. See the analysis in Kenneth J. Stewart, “The Tractarian Critique of the Evangelical Church Invisible: Newman’s Tracts 2, 11, 20 & 47 in Historical Context,” ChM 121 (2007): 347-360. 32 Newman, “No. 47. The Visible Church. Letter IV,” Tracts for the Times, Vol. 2 (London: J. G. & F. Rivington, 1836), 2.
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authoritative catholic tradition.33 This policy did not change when Newman
entered the Roman church. “Throughout his career as an ordained priest, first
Anglican and then Catholic,” observed Avery Dulles, “Newman continued to
pummel the doctrine that Scripture alone was a sufficient guide to faith.”34
What did change—in fact, what precipitated Newman’s move from Oxford to
Rome—was that he lost confidence in the via media as historical fact. This
entailed that the visible visage of the ancient church needed to be sought
elsewhere than in the C of E.35 The via media, which he thought characteristic
of English divinity, “contains a majestic truth” but lacks concrete
application—it is only abstractly true.36 The real history of Christianity, as he
claimed to have begun to realize during his preparatory reading of Bishop Bull
for The Arians of the Fourth Century, simply cannot deliver the doctrinal
consensus demanded by the Tractarian appeal to antiquity.37 In fact, the
standard of orthodoxy condemns many of the earlier fathers’ teachings on
central dogmas like the Trinity, original sin, or the homoousion.38 Clearly,
33 Turner, 276. For corroboration see Hermann Eigelsheimer, “John Henry Newman und der reformatorische Protestantismus,” (Ph.D. diss., Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, 1964), 54-73. 34 Avery Dulles, Newman (London: Continuum, 2002), 65. 35 In the Apologia, 210-13, Newman recalled his study of the monophysite controversy in the summer of 1839 as first raising doubts about the viability of the via media, specifically the reality of the Tractarians’ ‘Antiquity’. By the early 1840s (e.g. “No. 85. Lectures on the Scriptural Proofs of the Doctrines of the Church,” 14; Lectures on the Prophetical Office of the Church, 37, 335-6), Newman was suggesting that doctrines lie in Scripture as intimations, needing time and complementation to achieve fullness. In a review, “The History of Christianity, from the Birth of Christ to the Abolition of Paganism in the Roman Empire. By the Rev. H. H. Milman,” The British Critic 29 (1841): especially 77, 100-103, he countered Milman’s view that “nothing belongs to the Gospel but what originated with it” with an appeal to organic growth of doctrine. An Essay on the Miracles Recorded in the Ecclesiastical History of the Early Ages (London: J. G. and F. Rivington, 1843) blurred the demarcation between the New Testament and the early and medieval church so as to allow for miracles wrought by saints or relics. Most significantly, in an 1843 sermon, he used Luke 2:19—“but Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart”—to show how the “sacred impression” or “idea” of revelation needed time, prayer, and reflection to unfold to maturity. He marvelled at the rich catholic tradition that “is the expansion of few words, uttered, as if casually, by the fishermen of Galilee.” See “The Theory of Developments in Religious Doctrine,” in Sermons, Chiefly on the Theory of Religious Belief, Preached before the University of Oxford (London: J. G. F. & J. Rivington, 1843), especially 315, 317, 323-24, 335. Slowly but surely, Newman abandoned the Tractarian stronghold of Vincent’s canon for a theory of doctrinal development. 36 An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (London: James Toovey, 1845), 8, 24. The sixth edition of the Essay is standard, but because it is considerably revised I will use the original unless otherwise noted. 37 Ibid., 11-12. Anglican bishop and high churchman George Bull’s (1634-1710) famous Defensio Fidei Nicaenae contended against the Jesuit Petavius for the Trinitarian orthodoxy of the pre-Nicene church fathers. 38 Ibid., 25-26.
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unless the indisputable variation in church belief and practice over eighteen
hundred years is to be glossed over, and the hope of finding any continuity of
doctrine therein abandoned, only a theory of historical development can allow
the “family resemblance” of the ancient church to be discerned among the
ecclesiastical visages of the nineteenth century.39
Hence, Newman declared his Essay to be “undoubtedly an hypothesis
to account for a difficulty.”40 The hypothesis—a real historical development of
church doctrine—follows from the difficulty: Christianity as a real historical
phenomenon. “Its home is in the world, and to know what it is, we must seek
it in the world, and hear the world’s witness of it.”41 Contrasting his theory
with Tractarians’ appeals to a static tradition and the primitivist ecclesiology
of evangelicals, Newman professed to reckon with Christianity not as theory
but as it is, roughened by the wear and tear of time, savouring of the soil
where the gospel takes root. As he famously remarked: “in a higher world it is
otherwise, but here below to live is to change, and to be perfect is to have
changed often.”42
[2.3.2] As we turn to Cunningham’s review of the Essay, two things
become immediately apparent. First, the Scotsman engaged the Essay as the
crown of a decade-long campaign by Tractarians to undermine the Bible as the
singular and sufficient rule of faith. Unde inter nos et ipsos quaestio agitatur
de Perfectione Scriptura, declared his favourite divine, Francis Turretin
(1623-87), against Rome, a contention his scion widened to encompass
Tractarianism, and through both of them, Newman.43 He began his review by
remarking upon the long-suspected Romeward creep of Tractarianism, proved
at last by the conversion of Newman and some of his peons.44 While a rather
hackneyed course of argument, it is significant: Newman and the Tractarian
movement that he left behind should be viewed foremost through the lens
provided by the position on Scripture and tradition of the church to which all 39 Ibid., 137, 57. 40 Ibid., 58, 28. 41 Ibid., 2. 42 Ibid., 39. 43 Francis Turretin, Institutio Theologiae Elencticae (1679-85; reprint, Edinburgh: John Lowe, 1847), locus II, q. 16, i. 44 Cunningham, “Romanist Theory of Development,” 35-36 [hereafter abbreviated as “Romanist”].
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Tractarians, albeit at different speeds, were travelling. And the path from
Oxford to Rome was straight and broad. Both parties perjured Scripture’s
perfection and exalted in its place human, churchly tradition as the ground and
measure of doctrine.45 He underscored at a number of points that there was
little substantial differences between the two (even if the Tractarians rejected
supplementary tradition and rightly dismissed Trent’s accord with the early
church): both let apostolic warrant trespass its canonical boundary; both
insisted upon early church tradition’s necessary determination of the doctrines
contained in an opaque Bible; both shut their eyes to the irrefutable evidence
of the lack of doctrinal unanimity in the early church. Cunningham never let
out of sight the fact that because Oxford, Rome, and Newman all abandoned
the perfection of Scripture, all were obligated to appeal to historical tradition
to justify the discrepancy between biblical and church doctrine.46
Second, given his unflinching commitment to the perfection of
Scripture, Cunningham never really felt the “difficulty” that arose from
insistence upon the necessary role of church tradition in establishing the
Christian doctrine. He applauded Newman’s attack on the via media as able
and decisive, concurring that current scholarship was leaving the Vincentian
canon in shambles, although he was keen to remind Newman that the
wrecking ball was largely operated by German Protestants, whose
Dogmengeschichten were slowly becoming known in Britain. He noted as
well the affinity of Newman’s new position with the old Protestant case
against the integrity of Catholic tradition, and their rejection of a univocal
witness of the church fathers.47 Has Newman, then, aligned himself with the
Reformed conclusion that “the old Roman pretence of tracing historically their
doctrines and practices to primitive times can no longer be sustained?”48 Yes
and no. Cunningham resorted to the perfection of Scripture as the lingering
point of division. Where can one now find the one holy church that is “in
45 Ibid., 39-40. See also Cunningham, “Lecture XXXVI: Rule of Faith—General Principles—Popery and Tractarianism,” in Theological Lectures (London: James Nisbet & Co., 1878), 447-58. It is important to remember that Cunningham’s vocabulary of Scripture’s perfection, sufficiency, perspicuity, etc., was the technical terminology of classical Protestantism, not modern fundamentalism. 46 Ibid., 40-42, 44, 48. 47 “Romanist,” 40, 42. Cunningham also linked Newman to the controversy between Bull and Petavius (43-45). 48 Ibid., 48.
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substance the very religion which Christ and his Apostles taught in the first,”
asked Newman, given the undeniable fact of change in the church’s history?49
Cunningham answered: from the New Testament alone. “Give to us proof
your doctrinal additions proceeded from the New Testament” was the stock
response of the old Protestant apologists, confident that all doctrines, indeed,
all undisputed knowledge of the apostles’ teachings, are contained in a
pellucid Bible.50 But not only did Newman dismiss this position as fictitious,
he subpoenaed sola scriptura as damning evidence that “to be deep in history
is to cease to be Protestant.”51 The via media may be a paper theory, but at
least Tractarians were, so to speak, ‘in the game’. Since Protestants abandoned
the historical, visible church when it became clear that the testimony of church
history was no ally to their innovative doctrines, and ever since have taken
refuge from the study of church history in a fall theory of the church, they are
mere bystanders to all issues and questions arising from the church’s history.
Cunningham pounced on Newman’s claim that Protestants disregard
church history as showing all too clearly the English insularity of his
learning.52 But he happily pleaded guilty to Newman’s charge that Protestants
do not have the same stake in church history. “Protestantism,” he averred, “is
not historical Christianity.” Not only did the Antichrist reign for a millennium
over a materially different church, Protestants do not conflate authentic
Christianity with its historical manifestations. The standard and source of
church doctrine is the Bible alone and not church tradition. Herein lies the
ground of the lapsarian church historiography favoured by Protestants. A
perfect Scripture as the rod by which all facts of church history, all purported
cases of doctrinal development are to be measured, is coupled with the
indubitable fact of departure from that standard over the course of the church’s
49 Essay, 3. 50 “Romanist,” 51. Note also Westminster Confession, 1:6-7; Turretin, Institutio Theologiae Elencticae, locus II, q. 21, xiii: Unitas Ecclesiae per unitatem fidei in Scriptura traditae proprie conservatur, non per consensum Patrum, de quo vix ac ne vix quidem constarre potest. 51 John Henry Cardinal Newman, An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, 6th ed. (1878; reprint, Notre Dame: U of Notre Dame P, 1989), 8. 52 “Romanist,” 48. This claim is almost certainly connected to his complaint that Newman only superficially engaged the Protestant position on the sufficiency of Scripture. See footnote 56.
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history; when the Bible’s own testimony to both the corruption of the human
heart and the wiles of the Adversary set against Christ’s church is added to
this, a fall theory is both possible and probable (see 1.3.1-2).53 If not in
Scripture, then where, asked Cunningham, is Newman’s standard to be found
to allow genuine Christianity to be judged over against its historical
manifestations?54
The older Protestant-Catholic debate had deadlocked over whether the
receptacle of apostolic teaching was Scripture alone or Scripture plus early
church tradition. By insisting that both sources stand in need of further
development, because neither position can hold the tension between the fact of
doctrinal variation in the church’s history and the theological need for
continuity of ecclesiastical institution and belief, Newman, argued
Cunningham, “cuts the knot, but most certainly does not untie it.”55 Newman
has failed to answer any of the old Protestant arguments for a perfect
Scripture, to which, as the Confession has it, nothing “is to be added, whether
by new revelations of the Spirit, or traditions of men,” and from which all
things “necessary to be known, believed, and observed for salvation are so
clearly propounded, and opened in some place of Scripture or other, that not
only the learned, but the unlearned, in a due use of the ordinary means, may
attain unto a sufficient understanding of them” (I. 6-7).56 It is, for
Cunningham, this simple: a doctrine is true and binding only if it can be
satisfactorily proved to clearly inhere in Scripture—the sole repository of
divine teaching—or be logically deduced from it; if a doctrine fails this, or
contravenes Scripture’s plain sense, then it is either false or a corruption. Even
if a purported doctrine could be shown to be the result of a genuine historical
development, it would still not be binding because it would not be bound to an
inspired font.57
53 Ibid., 60-61. In this section the Confession 24:2-5 is being loosely paraphrased. 54 Ibid., 46-47. 55 Ibid., 51. 56 I am not certain what Cunningham meant by his assertion that Newman did not answer the old Protestant arguments—he dwelt at some length on the insufficiency of Scripture. Likely, he means that Newman did not appear to have read serious Protestant controversial literature on the subject, apart from Bull, but rebuked instead a caricature of popular evangelicalism. This is a justified complaint. 57 “Romanist,” 67. This, of course, relates to the third prong of Cunningham’s argument: the nature of revelation.
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[2.3.3] The second prong of Cunningham’s blistering review of the
Essay follows inevitably from the doctrinal and logical presuppositions laid
out beforehand. As a Tractarian-turned-Catholic, Newman was, in
Cunningham’s view, doubly implicated in the old error of casting aspersion
upon Scripture’s perfection. This did not mean, however, that he relied on
Rome’s old tricks to prove tradition’s primacy. Newman’s endorsement of
development, marvelled Cunningham, was nothing less than a “newly
invented substitute for the ground on which all former defenders of
Romanism—many of them men of great talent and ingenuity—had felt it
necessary or expedient to take their stand.”58 This complaint is the second
prong of his criticism of the Essay, and is repeated several times. Behind the
peevish tone of a pugilist who showed up for a duel only to find the rules of
combat inexplicably changed, a substantial charge is being made: Newman’s
scheme of the historical development of doctrine is incompatible with the
classic Catholic position on church tradition. As a result, both the nature of
historical evidence for assessing and validating a doctrine’s origin and the
method of proof for determining legitimate instances of doctrinal development
are radically altered.
In the Essay’s daring first chapter, Newman harked back to his seminal
discussion of the Christian revelation as an “impression” or “idea” in his 1843
sermon “The Theory of Developments in Religious Doctrine.” Christian
revelation is an overwhelming and inexhaustible impression; or, it is a
munificent idea that resists simple comprehension by words, concepts, and
feelings. It needs, rather, to be “walked round and surveyed on opposed sides
and in different perceptions and in contrary lights.”59 Development follows
necessarily from the profligacy of Christian revelation.
[T]he increase and expansion for the Christian Creed and Ritual, and the variations which have attended the process in the case of individual writers and Churches, are the necessary attendants on any philosophy or polity which takes possession of the intellect and heart, and has had any wide or extended dominion; that, from the nature of the human mind, time is necessary for the full comprehension and perfection of
58 Ibid., 53. 59 Essay, 32.
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great ideas; and that the highest and most wonderful truths, though communicated to the world once for all by inspired teachers, could not be comprehended all at once by the recipients, but, as received and transmitted by minds not inspired, and through media which were human, have required only the longer time, and deeper thought, for their full elucidation. This may be called the Theory of Development of Doctrine...60
Development takes mariological shape: a community spanning the ages
“ponder in their hearts” their piecemeal grasp of the idea. Such reflection
eventually produces a cumulative body of doctrines and practices that
sufficiently represent the original impression, or “will be what the idea meant
from the first.”61 This process is not a paper equation. It takes place, insisted
Newman, on the “busy scene of human life.” It rolls across cultures and
countries. It encounters and incorporates alien cult and creed, endows them
with new meaning or throws them off. And no facet of life and thought can
resist expansion, change and development inherent in this process.62 In fact,
the greater the idea, the greater the risk of corruption; and truly great ideas like
Christianity come to fruition only through warfare with other ideas.
Given the proleptic nature of ideas or impressions, Newman disputed
the evangelical axiom that, like a stream, revelation is clearest and purest near
the source. On the contrary, all great ideas flow purest and strongest
downstream, after having been swelled and thickened by tributaries and
having carved deep and wide into the bedrock. Consequently, church doctrines
are not cleanly plucked from where they nestle in the Bible or, as Tractarians
would have it, a favourite moment of church history. Doctrines have histories.
And those histories are inextricable from their God-intended fullness. To settle
for a doctrine’s inception rather than its consummation would be to spurn the
butterfly for the grub, to forget that “a representation which varies from its
60 Ibid., 27. On Newman’s theory of development see Paul Misner, “Newman’s Concept of Revelation and the Development of Doctrine,” HeyJ 11 (1970): 32-47; Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman, 134-63; Söll, Dogma und Dogmenentwicklung, 196-208; Hugo Meynell, “Newman on Revelation and Doctrinal Development,” JTS 30: 138-52; Bruno Forte, “‘Historia Veritatis’: On Newman’s An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine,” in Newman and Faith, ed. Ian Ker and Terrence Merrigan (Louvain: Peeters, 2004), 75-92. Newman likely owed his belief that doctrine is a secondary expression of religious truth to the “Oxford Noetics” like Richard Whately who influenced him during his student days at Oriel College. See Thomas C. Hummell, “John Henry Newman and the Oxford Noetics,” ATR 74 (1992): 203-215. 61 Ibid., 35-37. 62 Ibid., 43-54.
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original may be felt as more true and faithful than one which has more
pretensions to be exact.”63 This is the bomb Newman tossed at the Victorian
ecclesiologies of evangelical primitivism and Tractarian antiquitarianism.
He then proposed seven notes or tests of development to distinguish
healthy from diseased development of doctrine: preservation of type,
continuity of principle, assimilative power, logical sequence, anticipation,
preservative additions, and chronic vigour. Their prominence at the forefront
of the argument and, indeed, the fact that the vast portion of his Essay is
concerned with extrapolating these tests in the church’s doctrinal and liturgical
history, confirm his designs to ‘scientific’ history.64 This intent needs to be
respected, even if the tests themselves have been roundly criticized as almost
uselessly pliable—which was Cunningham’s view, too—and even if the heavy
deployment of “antecedents”, that is to say, deductive or presumptive
reasoning, in the subsequent course of argument undermines his aspirations.65
The taxonomy of tests is followed by sustained appeal to the antecedent
probability of doctrinal development based upon either the fact of Christian
revelation as an idea, or of Christianity as a “typical” religious idea.66 To take
but two examples of suggested antecedent probabilities, to the fore-mentioned
fact of the Scriptures’ “defect or inchoateness” which makes it probable that
“the letter needs completion,” he argued that if the “pregnant texts” of the
Hebrew prophets and the slow growth of the kingdom of Israel evidence the
dynamism of revelation and the fact of development inside the Bible, why not
outside of it? Newman also paid careful attention to Bishop Butler’s argument
of an analogy between nature and religion: the inexorable growth of natural
63 Ibid., 59-60. 64 The revised Essay (1878) pushes back the treatment of the notes to the beginning of part two. This, plus the excision of a lengthy section in the original affirming the pragmatic method of Gibbon and Mosheim (182-202), gives some credence to B. M. G. Reardon’s opinion in Religious Thought in the Victorian Age, 109, that Newman eventually reconciled himself to the neo-Thomist notion of development as logical deduction from revealed premises then prevailing in Catholic theology. 65 A notable exception is Gerald O’Collins, “Newman’s Seven Notes: The Case of the Resurrection,” in Newman After a Hundred Years, ed. Ian Ker and Alan G. Hill (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1990), 337-352. 66 Newman, 96, argues Christianity cannot plead immunity from the laws of growth and fact of change because the incarnation shows that it differs from other religions in what is superadded to the historical form.
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organisms suggests an antecedent probability that the Creator intended the
development of all his handiworks.67
He conceded that although the next step in his argument lacked direct
evidence it was, nevertheless, “required by the facts of the case.” Given that
revelation is bestowed as an impression God probably intended to develop;
given that the idea can only be appropriated piecemeal, which makes likely
various and competing interpretations; yet, given the fact that God gave
Christian truth objectively and likely wished it to remain so; and given the fact
that the essence of religion is obedience and authority, cannot a case be made
for the antecedent probability of an infallible interpreting authority?68 Only
now did Newman explicitly endorse Rome as “of all existing systems…the
nearest approximation in fact to the Church of the Fathers, possible though
some may think it, to be nearer still to that Church on paper.”69 The fact of
doctrinal development leaves it most proximate to the ancient catholic church
among all claimants, while the logic of historical development shows that its
claims to authority and exclusivity, though lacking direct evidence, are
antecedently probable given the nature of revelation, and in order to preserve
the dogmatic nature of religion.
This conjugation of the antecedent probabilities of a development of
doctrine and its infallible interpreter force a revolution in what Newman called
the “method of proof” in assessing development, as well as to “the state of the
evidence” left in the wake of an instance of development. Newman was now
treating the fathers similar to how he had treated the Bible as a Tractarian,
namely, as containing seminal doctrinal matter that achieved final form only
later, under the coaxing and control of an exterior interpreter.70 He is not
bothered, for example, by the fact that ante-Nicene theologians (even if they
implicitly held the whole revealed idea) spoke of Christ’s divinity in a way
suitable to Arian appropriation, or that the views on free will that appeared
before Augustine were rankly semi-Pelagian.71 For only from the viewpoint of
67 Essay, 97-100, 102-103, 108-10, 112-114. Butler’s (1692-1752) Analogy (1736), the great anti-Deist tract, was still required reading for many nineteenth-century British seminarians. 68 Ibid., 114, 116-18. 69 Ibid., 97-98. 70 Newman, 16, trod carefully (and even more so in the 6th ed., 19), affirming that ‘the fathers’ are an entity, but that attempts to read them as forwarding a consistent position is defeating. 71 Ibid., 160-63.
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a developed doctrine can “the converging evidence” be duly traced and
established, the gaps in the historical record filled, and a consensus of the
fathers found. And this does not take place by pure induction of the historical
record but as judgement of the church under papal guidance.72 Such is the
method of proof: as a biblical prophecy is interpreted by its fulfilment, so
dogmatic definition by the church “imposes a meaning” on the developmental
course of the doctrine.73
Newman knew full well that Francis Bacon was widely acclaimed in
Britain for having destroyed the method he was rejuvenating. He remained
convinced, however, that the “state of the evidence” in history typically
precludes the direct evidence coveted by the Baconian method. “In such
sciences, we cannot rest upon mere facts…because we have not got
them…and in such circumstances the opinions of others, the traditions of the
ages, the prescriptions of authority, antecedent auguries, analogies, parallel
cases…obviously become of great importance.”74 The historian who tries to
chart the secret valleys and hidden bights of the historical landscape is
inevitably thrown back onto presumption and antecedent probability.
Critics of the Essay have questioned Newman’s intent to write
unbiased history, accusing him of using antecedents to control material often
unfavourable to his dogmatic convictions, and, ultimately, to relieve entirely
the risk of historical development through the introduction of an infallible
interpreter. To be fair, however, Newman was not discarding what he called
“historical instances”. He conceded that if Pope or Council—the very oracles
of heaven—ever contradicted themselves, then “the hypothesis I am
advocating is at once shattered.”75 What he seemed to want was a
historiography consistent with the concept of development. If revelation is
given as an inchoate idea, reflection on which by the church-in-history
produces doctrine, then only in the act of doctrinal definition are the shadows
and hollows on the path of its historical development fully illuminated. Nunc
72 Ibid., 142, 165. 73 Ibid., 109-10, 144-148. This shifts onto Protestants the burden of proof for a corruption of doctrine. 74 Ibid., 179-80. 75 Essay, 6th ed., 121.
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dimittis servum tuum, Domine, secundum verbum tuum in pace. So ends his
essay: that bright vision in which, one day, all dim history will be seen.76
[2.3.4] Cunningham was not surprised that the Roman authorities
refused to read the Essay before its publication or endorse it thereafter.77 Not
only did Newman impertinently ignore the last four hundred years of Catholic
theology, his theory of development “interferes too obviously with their
claims to authority.”78 Cunningham was referring to the impressive exegetical
and patristic studies by Tridentine theologians which aimed to find, first of all,
scriptural warrant and testimony from the early church fathers for Catholic
doctrines, and then to prove that those doctrines were always held over the
course of the church’s history. In light of Newman’s revolution to the state of
the historical evidence, this vigorous defence of immutable tradition now
appeared to have been wasted labour. And is it not ironic, he mused, that up
until the broaching of Newman’s theory, the infallible interpreter of this
developing tradition was blithely unaware that its doctrines were developing
and, in fact, sought to prove the contrary beyond any doubt?79
More to the point, Newman’s “method of proof” overturned the
manner in which Catholic theologians had previously validated and defended
Roman doctrine. True, Cunningham hastened to add, his belittlement of
Scripture’s clarity was an old ploy to heighten the need for an infallible
interpreter; true, too, that the antecedent reasoning he used to coerce the
evidence was not unlike the a priori ecclesiological claims Rome had always
deployed to plug holes in its claim to an unbroken doctrinal tradition.80 But
formerly, Catholics at least shared with Protestants a belief that church
doctrine was contained in toto in a fixed body of propositional revelation,
recourse to which permitted a relatively straightforward debate between the
two sides over the biblical warrant and evidence in church history for a
contested doctrine—even if Rome did claim an apostolic residue in extra-
Biblical tradition. But it is this classic position, wagered Cunningham, which
76 Essay, 453. 77 See the preface of the Essay. 78 “Romanist,” 46, 54. 79 “Romanist,” 66-67. 80 Ibid., 45, 48-49, 64.
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is at odds with the Essay, because the theory of development endorsed therein
explodes the concreteness of revelation and, therefore, a historically delimited
apostolicity.81 Cunningham’s (correct) contention that Newman differed from
the traditional Roman apologetic assumes, of course, a propositional view of
revelation. As the Catholic theologian Joachim Drumm has pointed out,
propositional revelation entails a Konklusionstheologie, that is to say, dogma
or doctrine formed as logical conclusions from a body of revealed
propositions.82 Traditional Catholic theology knew this as the deposit of faith
(depositum fidei), although traditional Protestant theology held something very
much like it, finding it housed exclusively in Scripture rather than also
entrusted to the church. And it was a deposit of doctrines that Cunningham
considered ill-served by the scheme of historical development advanced in the
Essay, where revelation was less a system than a seed, and apostolicity
determined a doctrine diffusively rather than directly.
While the specifics of his complaint will be taken up in the following
section, Cunningham’s charge of the incompatibility of the Essay with the
classical Roman method of proof for assessing instances of doctrinal
development finds two targets. First, he points out that Newman resolved even
more upon an infallible interpreter to determine doctrine than did the old
apologists like Bellarmine. They at least sought to best Protestants on common
ground before they appealed over their opponents’ heads to papal
superintendence. But Newman’s theory eschewed the “fixedness” of
revelation that had provided a point of recourse for both sides and had
discouraged overly-hasty appeals to an infallible interpreter.83 Second, the
logical development of doctrine—what had been the only recognized form of
development for Protestants and Catholics—Newman marginalized. When a
81 Ibid., 40, 51-52. 82 Drumm, “Dogmenentwicklung,” 296. 83 Cunningham, 57, granted that Newman did not want to resolve so much onto the bare authority of the papal office, yet had to, given his understanding of revelation, and especially given the vagueness of his seven tests. The Essay explicitly professes that the development of doctrine requires an infallible interpreter (165-78). Yet Newman, while believing in the infallibility of the papacy, was not an ultramontantist and was initially wary of making the doctrine into a dogma. He was thus relieved with the Vatican Council’s somewhat restricted definition of the scope of papal infallibility. See the very thorough survey by Francis Sullivan, “Newman on Infallibility,” in Newman After a Hundred Years, 419-46 and the shorter assessment by Dulles, Newman, 92-96. Newsome, The Convert Cardinals, 276-84, brings out well the tension between Newman and the rabid ultramontanist and future cardinal and archbishop H. E. Manning (also an Anglican convert to Rome).
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deposit of faith is presumed, the doctrines contained therein are binding, as are
logical deductions from them. Cunningham complained that Newman gave
logic only one place of seven in his notes of development, and even then, used
it to play “fantastic tricks.”84 Given the nature of revelation as idea, Newman
insisted that doctrinal developments “are carried on silently and
spontaneously.” A notion of logical development should be considered less a
deliberate undertaking of the church to create a “body of thought” than a
check brought in at the end of the process to ensure the coherence and
appropriateness of the developed doctrine.85 Indeed, the slight attention
Newman paid to his fourth test of logical sequence indicated his distance from
the traditional mindset of deduction and inference from a deposit of faith, and
left Cunningham despairing, “Mr. Newman has an ingenious and subtle, but
not very logical, mind.”86
[2.3.5] Cunningham’s final gravamen against the Essay reveals the
tight sequence of his three-pronged critique. Newman, having abandoned
Scripture for ‘Antiquity’, then having had his faith in the sufficiency of early
church tradition shaken by the historical evidence, seized upon a notion of
doctrinal development wholly foreign to the classical Roman Catholic
apologetic in order to save the Roman doctrinal tradition. Hence, the third
prong: whereas Rome and Protestantism once met on the common ground of a
fixed, closed revelation to which all parties had recourse through historical
investigation and a shared commitment to logical inference, his theory of
doctrinal development, in essentially infidel and German fashion, submerges
revelation into the turbulent flow of history, leaving Christians haplessly
unsure of God’s will—apart, of course, from the deus ex machina role of the
papacy.
This third prong resorted to the penchant of Victorian theologians to
blacklist new ideas by tagging them with a “made in Germany” label. The
same infidel spirit ravaging Germany possesses Newman, charged
Cunningham. There, it breeds such scepticism to God’s word that sanctuary
84 Ibid., 71. 85 Essay, 81-82. 86 “Romanist,” 45. Newman would be unperturbed by the comment!
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must be sought in reason; here, only external authority saves Newman from
the shaky probabilism born of his scepticism towards God’s word.87 This Geist
demeans revelation as defective, incomplete, and so over-conditioned by its
birthplace that universal application is wanting without the enlargement and
improvement provided by Reason or Rome. Note the similarity, he urged,
between Newman’s theory and the contemporary Halle neologist
Wegscheider’s belief: Religio Christiania ad majorem perfectionis gradum
evolvi potest.88 Yet, behind the sensationalistic jargon of ‘Teutonic infidelity’,
Cunningham had discerned a substantial problem in the Essay. As usual, the
insight owed to the unyielding doctrine of Scripture he inherited from
Protestant orthodoxy. Perhaps also lurking in the background was his
trepidation that certain circles in his own tradition, under the heady influence
of continental Romanticism, namely the McLeod-Campbell—Edward Irving
—Catholic Apostolic church nexus, were revoking the finality and
completeness of revelation as had the Montanists of old (see 1.4.5).89
Cunningham found Newman torn—he wanted only a “subjective”
development of doctrine but needed “objective” development to save Roman
tradition. The former maintains the expansion of theological science toward a
better understanding of doctrines and their consequences; the latter posits “an
actual external addition to the objects of faith, or the doctrines believed.” The
tension between subjective and objective development of doctrine resides in
the Essay’s problem-fraught concept of revelation. What is the tenor and tense
of the revelation upon which church doctrine is based and from which it
purportedly develops?90 Sometimes a closed corpus of propositional revelation
87 “Romanist,” 53, 73. The essentially sceptical cast of Newman’s mind was a frequent charge of nineteenth century critics. E.g. Andrew M. Fairbairn, The Place of Christ in Modern Theology (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1898), 25-47; George Park Fisher, History of Christian Doctrine (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1896), 460-61; Otto Pfleiderer, The Development of Theology in Germany since Kant, and its Progress in Great Britain since 1825, 446-50. 88 Ibid., 52. Here and below, Cunningham was citing from Institutiones theologiae christianae dogmaticae, §27. 89 It is significant that Cunningham did not oppose Irving and McLeod Campbell solely on account of their Christology, but also because he feared that their participation in tongues and prophecy loosed the Spirit from the Word. Irving is compared to Tertullian in Historical Theology, 1: 162-63. 90 “Romanist,” 58, 55. Paul Schrodt, The Problem of the Beginning of Dogma in Recent Theology (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1978), 184-202, concludes that it is difficult to ascertain if Newman thought the source and warrant of dogma lay in a fixed deposit or in the church’s present mind. Broadly speaking, his relating of doctrine to revelation and,
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is assumed. It yields a “body of theology” or theological “system” which
achieves indelible definition as dogma through the agency of an infallible
ecclesiastical institution. Yet, he sometimes implies a truly startling notion of
revelation as a pre-conceptual, supra-verbal “idea”, whose inexhaustibility
cannot be wholly reduced to or contained by church dogma or institution.91
The former is agreeable to the conventional Christian belief in a closed
revelation—but not the latter. It mingles divine revelation too much in the
ways of the world, complained Cunningham, so that not only does
supernatural revelation become comprehended like any other “idea”, that is to
say, subject to temporal development and the conditions of human finitude, it
also sprawls out of the Bible and into the mundane history of the church.
Subjective development unfolds from a concrete, fixed notion of
apostolicity—Newman did hold that the apostles, as the original impress of
revelation and its subsequent purveyor, knew “all the high truths of
theology.”92 But by insisting that the impression or idea of revelation
permitted the apostles to only implicitly know such high truths, he rendered
apostolicity suggestive for doctrine rather than directive, a source to be
developed rather than the bar by which developments are to be measured. Not
quite fairly, Cunningham, in fact, deemed Newman to have functionally
abandoned apostolicity as a mark of true doctrine.93
This 1846 review was only among the first to wonder if Newman’s
theory entailed continuing revelation.94 Seizing upon sentences in the Essay
like “such as it begins, such let it be considered to continue,”95 Cunningham
specifically, the question of whether his theory entails continuing revelation, remains contested among Newman scholars. It should be remembered that I am trying to summarize Cunningham’s perspective in this section, not offer my own interpretation. 91 Note carefully Newman’s use of language in the Essay, especially 34-35, 137. 92 Essay, 83. 93 “Romanist,” 51. This is an unfair criticism inasmuch as Rome understands the concept of the church’s apostolicity differently than Protestants or the Orthodox, as the succession of bishops from the apostles (Wilfried Härle, “Apostolizität,” in RGG4 1, 653-54). Cunningham’s point has force, however, in drawing attention to the fact that Tridentine Catholicism was insistent that Catholic dogma was explicitly apostolic, i.e., as the First Vatican Council declared, “contained in written books and unwritten traditions, which were received by the apostles from the lips of Christ himself, or came to the apostles by the dictation of the holy Spirit, and were passed on as it were from hand to hand until they reached us (“On Revelation,” 2:5). 94 “Romanist,” 63. 95 Essay, 119. A few pages later, Newman, leaning upon Butler’s use of an analogy from nature, seemingly collapsed creation into providence and the act of revelation into its
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felt compelled to conclude that Newman’s theory ultimately crowned the pope
as the standing organ of revelation who, no longer content to just authorize
inferences from a fixed body of revelation, could now add new doctrines.96
Tradition, under papal oversight, now carries revelatory power rather than,
traditionally, a disclosing or clarifying function. And this fact finally aligned
Newman with Wegscheider’s theory of an objective development of Christian
belief. Omnino autem in religionem major perfectio cadere dicitur, non tam
sensu quodam subjectivo, quatenus ejus cognitio in hominibus perfectio reddi
potest, quam objectivo, ita ut ea religionis doctrinae intelligatur indoles quae
permittit adeoque juvat et methodi et ipsius argumenti emendationem,
temporis successu suscipiendam. Moreover, Cunningham made a significant
concession: if Newman is correct that church doctrine historically, i.e.
objectively, develops, then an infallible interpreter is indeed required to avoid
“inextricable confusion and leave every man to be practically a rule to
himself.”97 Yet the parting shot of his review harked back to a concept of
revelation which made such an infidel theory wholly unnecessary: the old
Roman theory of doctrinal continuity and logical development from the
depositum fidei, he concluded, remained superior to Newman’s attempt at
improvement.98 Ironically, this closing jab by an ironclad evangelical Calvinist
was one almost all mainstream nineteenth-century Catholic theologians would
also wholeheartedly endorse.99
maintenance: “as creation argues continual governance, so are the Apostles harbingers of Popes” (124). 96 “Romanist”, 52, 68-69. 97 Ibid., 66. 98 Ibid., 75-6. 99 Despite being invited to the Vatican Council in 1870 and receiving a cardinal’s hat in 1879, Newman remained an outsider to the Catholic hierarchy in both England and Rome during his lifetime. His notion of doctrinal development did not sit well with the Vatican and most Catholic theologians in the nineteenth century. It was radicalized by Modernists like Tyrell and Loisy and condemned under their guise in the 1907 encyclical Pascendi dominici gregis. Victor Consemius, “The Condemnation of Modernism and the Survival of Catholic Theology,” in The Twentieth Century: A Theological Overview, ed. Gregory Baum (Marynoll: Orbis, 1999), 14-19, provides context. The Essay, however, grew in reputation and influence among mainstream Catholic thought, so much so that the Second Vatican Council has been often interpreted as Newman’s posthumous vindication. Some scholars—notably Nicolas Lash, “Tides and Twilights: Newman since Vatican II,” in Newman After a Hundred Years, 447-464—doubt very much the explicit influence of the Essay on the council documents and subsequent papal teaching. Yet Newman’s theory does appear latent in the statements on divine revelation in Verbum Dei, 8 (http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19651118_dei-verbum_en.html), and the recent
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[2.3.6] Because Cunningham reviewed An Essay on the Development
of Doctrine as the work of a turncoat Tractarian—not a saint, a cardinal, or a
religious sage—he assessed the Essay through the hoary Protestant-Catholic
debate over Scripture and tradition. When the Essay is assessed by a mind
fluent in the finical debates of sixteenth and seventeenth-century controversial
theology, it takes some hard hits, especially regarding the compatibility of the
theory of doctrinal development with traditional Catholic teaching, and the
tenability of its reconstruction of the relationship between Scripture,
revelation, and doctrine. Newman’s breezy dismissal of traditional Protestant
church historiography and its carefully nuanced articulation of Scripture’s
perfection appear grossly irresponsible. “Newman would have perhaps judged
Protestantism differently had he obtained an exact knowledge of the
Reformation, which he clearly did not have,” Hermann Eigelsheimer rightly
argued.100
Yet, if Cunningham’s strategic position within the seventeenth-century
status quaestionis regarding Scripture, tradition, doctrine, allowed him to lob
some penetrating criticisms at Newman’s case for the development of
doctrine, it also sequestered him behind immovable ramparts. He was simply
unable to gauge the new state of the question forecast by the Essay for the
nineteenth century. Peter Toon concluded a study of the Victorian evangelical
response to Tractarianism with words that could apply almost verbatim to
Cunningham’s response to Newman’s Essay.
It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that Evangelicals never really answered the doctrine of justification proposed by Newman. They were so wedded to looking at the subject in terms of the possible formal causes, either internal or external, that they looked for a scholastic basis for Newman’s doctrine of an internal righteousness and believed they found it in the teaching of the apostles. So their response to the Tractarian teaching was governed by their knowledge of the controversies between Protestants and Catholics in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.101
Catechism of the Catholic Church, 94, http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_INDEX.HTML. 100 Eigelsheimer, 222. 101 Peter Toon, Evangelical Theology 1833-1856: A Response to Tractarianism (London: Marshall, Morgan & Scott, 1979), http://www.anglicanbooksrevitalized.us/Peter_Toon_Books_Online/evantheo.html.
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Cunningham was fighting a past battle. His theological mind lagged several
centuries behind Newman’s venturous attempt to account for the history of the
church and its doctrines in a manner sensitive to the challenges to the study of
church history and the origins and development of doctrine born of the critical
scholarship of the eighteenth century, and appropriate to the historical
consciousness inundating the nineteenth century. In the Essay, Newman had
pointed to Jesus’ parable of the leaven (Luke 13:18-21) as suggestive and
permissive of doctrinal development beyond the letter of the Bible. But
Cunningham only ever heeded Jesus’ warning to beware the leaven of human
tradition blighting God’s pure word (Matthew 16:6).
2.4. Historical Theology The verbose literary reviews of Victorian-era periodicals allowed much
to be said, but not all. Fortunately, Cunningham’s church history lectures at
New College, which were posthumously edited and published as Historical
Theology: A Review of the Principal Doctrinal Discussions in the Christian
Church since the Apostolic Age, expand and illuminate the critical perspective
set forth in the North British Review.102 Cunningham expected his students to
learn church history proper through a prescribed textbook. His lectures, in the
manner of seventeenth-century controversial theology, forsook a genetic
narrative to focus instead on the “great developments of truth and error” (4)
over the history of the church.103 Ever the redoubtable Presbyterian, he
dawdled little over the institutional history of the church or the history of
Christian thought, and not at all over the social history of the Christian
religion, but—and here, at least, he thought the Germans correct!—drove
straight to the heart of the matter: the history of dogma. Church history on this
plan has the decidedly servile function of providing commentary on a given
doctrine’s controversial setting, be it true or false, then illustrating that
doctrine’s effect for good or ill on the life of the church. Church historians
hew wood and draw water for the systematic theologian to build “correct and
102 Cunningham, Historical Theology, 2 vol. (1864; reprint, Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1960). References will be made within the text and are taken from volume one only. 103 Likewise, in his “Introductory Lecture on Church History,” in Inauguration of the New College of the Free Church, 75, Cunningham described his two-year church history curriculum as centring on theological issues raised in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
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intelligent views of the doctrines revealed in God’s word.”104 In effect,
Cunningham’s lectures conjured up an ethereal seminar room where the
church’s greatest minds met in happy isolation to debate doctrine. The
published result is two tomes of capable and vigorous discussion of specific
doctrines, which deeply disappoint as historical theology. For not only does
the history of doctrines function as a helpmate to systematic theology in such a
way that its sheer “pastness” is thinned and flattened, the history of the
church’s faith is not determined by its actual historical life. Simply put,
Cunningham imposed onto the history of theology a theological system
weighted to evangelical Reformed emphases on the bondage of the will,
atonement, justification, and church, all of which he felt were under threat in
his own day no less than in the church’s past. This thrust into prominence the
controversies between Augustine and Pelagius over grace and freewill,
Anselm and Abelard over the atonement, and the Reformers and Trent over
Scripture and justification by faith. Further, his evangelical Christus pro nobis
approach to doctrinal theology downgraded in importance the lengthy
controversies over the Trinity and the person of Christ in the early church
because they were rife with speculative metaphysics.105
Despite the limitations of Historical Theology—or, rather, because of
them—two unspoken factors that controlled Cunningham’s review of
Newman’s Essay now found articulation. The first concerns the nature of the
church’s visibility, which frames the question of the historical continuity of
the church and its doctrines. Protestants and Catholics, he argued, both believe
that an account of church history is partly determined by an a priori doctrine
of the church, specifically, Christ’s promise of presence in or with his church
(33-36, e.g. Matt. 16:18-19, 28:20).106 Contrary interpretations of how Christ’s
promise secures the visible course of the church in history influence how
Protestants and Catholics assess historical evidence, furcating, as a
consequence, their respective church historiographies. That Rome interprets
Christ’s promise as preserving (under papal surrogacy) his perpetually spotless 104 “Introductory Lecture on Church History,” 59-77, especially 67. 105 He held the Apostles Creed to be an insufficient statement of Christian belief because it does not make explicit grace and atonement (Historical Theology, 1: 94). 106 Lukas Vischer, “Church History in Ecumenical Perspective: A Preliminary Discussion Paper,” in Church History in Ecumenical Perspective, ed. Lukas Vischer (Bern: E. A. O. Schweiz, 1982), 11, argues similarly.
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bride from all errors of faith and doctrine and, indeed, from the ravages of
time itself (12-13, 35-42), lets her view the church’s visibility as continuity of
institution, uniformity of doctrine and cult, and the ever present primacy of
Peter’s see. Her defenders must assemble this from the historical record—not
an easy task, remarked Cunningham wryly, as Cardinal Baronius’ Annales
ecclesiastiae and Bellarmine’s Disputationes de controversies christianae
fidei make clear (11-12, 37). “They admit, indeed, that errors and corruptions
soon appeared among professed Christians,” he summed up the classic Roman
defence of its visibility,
but then they allege that these errors never infected the church, since she always rejected and condemned the errors, and expelled from her pale those who maintained them. They assert that the Catholic church, in communion with the see of Rome, has always maintained the apostolic faith pure and uncorrupted, without any mixture of error; that she has never changed her faith or contradicted herself; that all the doctrines she now holds she has always maintained stedfastly [sic] since the apostolic times, without variation, although from time to time she has given more full and explicit definitions and explanations regarding them, in opposition to the various heresies that may have been propounded (35).107
The Reformed, on the other hand, strip church visibility of its
institutional and clerical apparel, as well as its pretensions to infallibility.
Christ’s promises ensure an indefectible witness to him and his teachings in
history, but the student of church history may be hard pressed to spot this
visible church in the catacombs and mountain vales where it often fled to keep
the faith (17). If Cunningham was repeating the standard Protestant distinction
between the church visible and invisible, his view was surely strengthened by
his experience as a minister who suffered the loss of the benefits of Scotland’s
established religion in order to visibly witness to Jesus Christ.108
Second, Cunningham outlined some historiographical repercussions of
the opposing determinations of church visibility held by Protestants and
Catholics. Protestants, as he had conceded to Newman, do not have the same 107 Cunningham recognized variety among the Salamanca school over the development of doctrine [see ch. 1, 2.3.1] and differences between Jesuits and Gallicans over papal authority. See also Cunningham, “XXIX. Tradition: Positive Evidence against It,” in Theological Lectures, 482-83. 108 It is likely in this sense, then, that Cunningham chastened Protestants for too often treating the invisible church as literally invisible (17). See the summary of the Reformed understanding of the church as visible/invisible by Louis Berkhof, Systematic Theology, 4th ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1941), 565-67.
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stake in church history as Catholics do. Rome “is open to a fatal wound from
the testimony of history” if the actual history of the church contradicts its
diffused and detailed interpretation of Christ’s promise (38). The Protestant
understanding of church visibility, however, refuses to sanctify institutional
church history. It pleads agnosticism about the specific outworking of Christ’s
promise of guidance, which frees Protestants for an inductive investigation of
the unvarnished history of the church (33-34, 36-38). Cunningham admitted
that Roman incredulity regarding Protestants’ somewhat meagre interpretation
of Christ’s promise of presence carried a gut appeal. But he maintained that a
Protestant conception of the visible church is better attuned to the “plain facts
of history” (37) and, moreover, is consistent with the “analogy of divine
procedure,” that is to say, with the fact that God’s people have always suffered
trial and sword, and that God’s own word foretells apostasy and the rise of
charlatans who will deceive even the elect (42).109
In this context in Historical Theology Cunningham briefly reintroduced
Newman’s theory of doctrinal development as a diabolic ploy to shield Roman
claims of the ‘visibility’ of its doctrinal tradition from the threat of history by
making that same visibility the antecedent measure of church history and of
so-called instances of doctrinal development (40-1). The charge here, as in his
review of the Essay, is that Newman, in typical Roman fashion, had to clean
flaws in the historical evidence with an aspergillum. Yet, when church history
is interpreted “in the ordinary way” (37), inclusive of a presumption of “the
fullness and completedness of the revelation which, at different times, He gave
of His character and plans and especially of the method of salvation,” a
departure from scriptural doctrine is obvious—not, as Newman would have it,
a development (2, his emphasis). A fall theory of church history is both a
likely interpretation of New Testament prophecy and confirmed by the
historical evidence: upon the close of apostolic revelation, seeds of doctrinal
error took root and bore ruinous fruit among even the orthodox church fathers.
By the seventh century, the reign of the papal anti-Christ had fully matured
and the church was in bondage.110 Cunningham let German scholars like
109 See further Historical Theology, 1: 442-43. 110 This timeline was typical of Reformed orthodoxy. Note Turretin, Institutiones, locus II. q. 21, iii.
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Mosheim and Wegscheider marshal evidence for a discrepancy between
apostolic and post-apostolic doctrine and church life he used to confirm the
church’s lapse from biblical standards. And while he had read enough Neander
to begrudge a value to every period of church history, and was not wholly
unappreciative of the fathers’ or schoolmen’s contributions (8), he accused
both of “the almost regularly progressive corruption of the church” (140) and
“the corruption of doctrine” (154). “The progress of error” (169) continued
through the Middle Ages, although Christ was never deprived of faithful
witnesses like Claude of Turin, the Waldensians and Cathars, Wycliffe and
Hus (439-58), until light broke out again at the Protestant Reformation.
Historical Theology is not devoid of stimuli for thinking about church
doctrine in historical perspective, even in spite of the problems with a “fall
theory” of church history. Historical Theology may have predated the
incarnational turn among nineteenth-century evangelicals, but it is Christ-
centred nevertheless (and not only that a focus on the appropriated benefits of
Christ dictated its contents). If Newman implied that the notion of organic
development advocated in the Essay was the consequence of the incarnation as
Christianity’s central fact,111 then the church historiography of Historical
Theology has as its cornerstone the rejected one, he who causes men to
stumble. An interesting ramification of the Reformed distinction between the
visible and invisible church that will be taken up in the conclusion is
Cunningham’s claim that a Protestant understanding of Christ’s promises
liberates historians to investigate and assess church history and the history of
doctrines. In theory, this is a plea for the courage of an unflinching
examination of the church’s past apart from the vested interests of
ecclesiological tradition. It bears semblance to certain German Enlightenment
thinkers’ attempts to wield a “Protestant principle” as a critical tool—that is to
say, to protest any religious authority that claims to be absolute or final.112
111 Essay, 135. Aside from this passage, the Essay seems little affected by an ‘incarnational logic’. 112 Paul Tillich, The Protestant Era (Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1948), http://www.religion-online.org/showchapter.asp?title=380&C=98: “The Protestant principle is the judge of every religious and cultural reality, including the religion and culture which calls itself ‘Protestant’.”
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Lastly, that the principalities and powers are, for Cunningham, agents
of discernible influence in the history of the church’s attempt to teach correct
doctrine—that Satan, thrown from the heights, as a recent theologian
remarked, remains a snake in the grass113—indicates his proximity to the New
Testament and views held by the fathers, schoolmen, and reformers, and his
vast distance from both the canons of modern scholarship and Newman’s
largely secular interpretation of doctrinal development.114
Unfortunately, Cunningham lacked the resolve to unpack the
possibilities within a fall theory for church history or Dogmengeschichte.
Ultimately, he committed himself to a reductionist sola scriptura that was
attributable to the interplay of his Reformed and evangelical inheritance with
factors of circumstance and personality.115 The courage to face the history of
the church and its doctrines stripped of sanctimony was, finally, something
only Roman Catholics need muster; Cunningham used current critical
scholarship, but solely applied its results to their dogmas and doctrines. His
Reformed and evangelical doctrinal convictions, because they were plucked
directly from where they lay as revealed propositions in Scripture, were held
aloof from any challenge history could pose. Thus, he could admit that the
patristic anthologies drawn up by Reformed theologians in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries failed to deliver the fathers to the Protestant side (182-
83, 276), yet remain unfazed by the fact. The doctrines of Christ or the Trinity,
after all, are better and more clearly attested in the plain words of the Bible
than in any theological or creedal statement of early church father or
council.116 Such a static view of the formative process of Christian doctrine,
such naivety toward his own place in the Western doctrinal tradition, as well
113 Paul F. M. Zahl, A Short Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000), 45. 114 Turner, 583, rightly speaks of the Essay’s “profoundly naturalistic” historiography. 115 Cunningham bears the influence of the early nineteenth-century retrenchment of Scripture [see ch. 1, 4.3.2], even if his doctrine of Scripture owed more to classical Protestantism than to the proto-fundamentalist theories of inspiration and infallibility especially associated with Louis Gaussen’s Theopneustia (1840). On the latter see the interesting article by Kenneth J. Stewart, “A Bombshell of a Book: Gaussen’s Theopneustia and its Influence on Subsequent Evangelical Theology,” EQ 75 (2003): 215-237. 116 He argued similarly in “XXXVIII. Tradition: Its Alleged Necessity Proved by Instances,” in Theological Lectures, 470-72, that most doctrines claimed by Catholics or Tractarians to be only found in or best articulated by tradition can be really drawn from the perspicuous Scriptures.
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as a thoroughly idiosyncratic approach to the discipline of church history,
implicate Cunningham as one who was most certainly not “deep in history.”
2.5. Calvin, Calvinism, and Development In an 1861 essay “Calvin and Beza”, Cunningham took up, and then
rejected, the oft-repeated accusation that Theodore Beza, Calvin’s successor in
Geneva, was, to lamentable consequence, a Calvino Calvinior.117 Along with
an article from the same year, “Calvinism and its Practical Application”, this
was a rare occasion when he positively treated the development of doctrine.
The two articles provide a sterling example of the justification of doctrinal
development through logical inference, typical of scholastic theological
method.118 It also indicates that to the very end of his life, Cunningham’s self-
quarantine from the diffusing historical consciousness of his time showed no
signs of lifting.
Cunningham recognized that Beza was not Calvin’s parrot. He
proceeded beyond Calvin in regard to the extent of the atonement.
Cunningham, in fact, cautioned against posing the question ‘for whom did
Christ die?’ to Calvin, since a perusal of his writings makes clear that he never
directly addressed the issue (408-09). Nonetheless, material continuity on this
topic exists between the two reformers. Differences owed to the “enlarged
controversial discussion” in which Beza found himself as a third generation
Protestant (350). Cunningham is thus consonant with the long-standing
allowance in the Christian tradition for heresy and false teaching, controversy
and debate, to grant a doctrine an enhanced and refined clarity.119 Yet, he
appeared unwilling to grant historical circumstances sole responsibility for
Beza’s expanded treatment of the atonement, as if the new university setting
of Reformed theology or the need to respond to Lutheran and Roman Catholic
antagonists were alone engines of development. Doctrine develops not only
117 Cunningham, “Calvin and Beza,” in The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation (1862; reprint, Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 2000), 345-412. References will be made within the text. A modern overview of the “Calvin against the Calvinists” debate is provided by Carl Trueman, “Calvin and Calvinism,” in The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, 225-245. 118 A slight treatment can also be found in Historical Theology, 1: 208-11. 119 Maurice Wiles, The Making of Christian Doctrine: A Study in the Principles of Early Doctrinal Development (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1967), 8-40; Pelikan, Historical Theology, 1-32.
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from environmental pressures but through inner compulsion; doctrinal
development not only explains the Bible’s doctrines in and to a new situation,
it explains them better.
Men are bound to improve…all their opportunities of acquiring the most clear, accurate, and exact knowledge of all truths revealed in the sacred Scriptures; and some men, in seeking to discharge this duty, have been honoured by the Head of the church to contribute largely to diffuse among their fellow-men more correct, definitive, and comprehensive views of Christian doctrine than had prevailed before, and to show that these views were indeed sanctioned by the word of God (411).
Because third generation Protestants like Beza had at their disposal improved
philological and historical tools for interpreting the biblical text and world,
they better understood the Bible, and were, accordingly, able to hone the
evangelical doctrines of their predecessors.120 But neither should the inner
impulse of development be overlooked: first, an evangelical Victorian note of
inevitable improvement can be detected; second, the Spirit’s bestowal of
wisdom upon specific doctors of the church to allow them to penetrate deeply
into the doctrines of Scripture to benefit the whole people of God.
Cunningham plotted an ascending development or improvement of
doctrine wherein what he would call the “doctrines of grace” were absolutely
central: from Augustine, leaping “the dark ages” to the Reformation, then
reaching a zenith in seventeenth-century Reformed orthodoxy (411).
Seventeenth-century divines like Turretin, the Dutch theologians Peter van
Mastricht (1630-1706) and Hermann Witsius (1636-1708), J. H. Heidegger
(1633-98), professor at Zürich, and the confessional statements from the same
high point of Reformed orthodoxy like the Westminster Standards and Canons
of Dordt, “conclusively determined”, even “completed”, the prior century and
half of Reformed theology. In fact, the clarity and fullness of exposition of the
doctrines of Scripture reached then remain unsurpassed (412).121
The mechanism of doctrinal development as inference or deduction
from revealed propositions becomes explicit in “Calvinism and its Practical
120 Muller, PRRD, 2: 482-501, documents that to which Cunningham is referring. 121 Honeycutt, 298, arrives at the same conclusion as I do.
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Application.”122 Appealing directly to the Confession’s declaration that
Scripture is the source from which “all things necessary for his [God’s] own
glory, man's salvation, faith, and life, is either expressly set down…or by good
and necessary consequence may be deduced…” (1.6), Cunningham defended
the Reformed doctrine of reprobation as “the fair and legitimate application of
the views revealed to us as to what God has purposed,” i.e., as a necessary
deduction from more explicit biblical doctrines of election, sin and grace, and
atonement (526, 539).123 He faulted orthodox Arminian divines for admitting
the doctrines of Christ’s divinity, atonement, and the agency of the Spirit but
then suffering a failure of nerve to “fully apply them in some of their most
important bearings and consequences” (528). He called these inferences
“Scriptural consequences” (527), but there is no mistaking the affinity of his
method with how Roman theologians like Molina and Vãzquez necessarily
inferred dogmas from revealed premises, or the similarity of his insistence that
the “practical application” of a doctrine contained in or deduced from the
Bible is also binding on the church with the de fide status of inferred dogmas
in Tridentine Catholicism (see 1.2.3).
A scheme of doctrinal development as the improvement of doctrinal
expression needs to be distinguished from historical development.
Cunningham affirmed that the church’s understanding of its doctrines
progressed over its history. His friend and theological comrade-in-arms
Charles Hodge spoke even more optimistically of an “uninterrupted
development of theology in the Church.”124 For these two Presbyterians—both
devotees of scholastic Protestantism (especially Turretin) and committed to
the Confession’s endorsement of the deduction of doctrines from sacred
principles—doctrinal development was a predominantly logical process, with
the accidents of environment and circumstance playing a minor role. Like its
Catholic analogue, doctrine progressed on the historical plane, that is to say,
over time, but was not really historical development. It was axiomatic that true 122 Cunningham, “Calvinism and its Practical Application,” in The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation, 525-599. 123 Note Turretin, Institutio Theologiae Elencticae, locus II, q.16, iii: Fatemur enim multa per legitimam consequentiam bene ex Scriptura deduci, et pro Dei Verbo habenda esse. See further C. J. Williams, “Good and Necessary Consequence in the Westminster Confession,” in The Faith Once Delivered: Essays in Honour of Wayne R. Spear, ed. Anthony T. Selvaggio (Phillipsburg: P & R, 2007), 171-190. 124 Hodge, Systematic Theology, 1:117.
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doctrine held aloof from historical conditionality, that history was a venue for
the development of doctrine but not an agent, and that the development of
doctrine, once achieved, was irrevocable. Here, as elsewhere, Cunningham’s
concept of development assumed the propositional nature of biblical
revelation and, further, the classical Protestant understanding of Scripture’s
perspicuity and sufficiency for the formulation of Christian doctrine. What
appears perhaps more pronounced in these two articles than in previous
writings analysed is Cunningham’s evangelical inheritance. It underlay his
appeal to the inductive method to extract doctrines from the repository of
Scripture, as well as the fact that the logical deduction from or refinement of
an established doctrine is, at least sometimes, in concert with a latent
expectation of improvement typical of mainstream Victorian evangelicalism.
It is exasperating that contemporary Presbyterian theology seems to
have not progressed much beyond Cunningham. With a few exceptions,
Reformed theologians still are not distinguishing themselves in either thinking
through the historical genesis of catholic doctrine or nuanced, impartial
examinations of their own confessional morphology. Theological discussion
of doctrinal development is focussed on the debate over ‘Calvin against the
Calvinists’. If doctrinal development is admitted, it is as logical inference. Did
later Reformed theology, particularly the Westminster Confession and the
Synod of Dordt develop away from Calvin’s theology as Barthians argue, or
does later Calvinism faithfully reflect the master’s mind as more conservative
Reformed theologians maintain? Of course both sides are reflecting the typical
ahistoricism of the Reformed tradition either in concern for a pure Calvin
against which all developments must be gauged or, alternately, in making the
seventeenth-century confessional documents the terminus of legitimate logical
development of the teachings of Calvin or Bullinger or Bucer on covenant,
predestination, atonement, polity, etc....125
125 E.g. the strictly logical understanding of development in two examples of this debate is typical of the whole: Paul Helm, “Calvin, English Calvinism and the Logic of Doctrinal Development,” SJT 34 (1981): 179-85; M. Charles Bell, “Was Calvin a Calvinist?” SJT 36 (1983): 535-40. A similar problem blights Mark Karlberg, “Doctrinal Development in Scripture and Tradition: a Reformed Assessment of the Church’s Theological Task,” CTJ 30 (1995): 401-18, as well as the excellent study by M. Eugene Osterhaven, The Faith of the Church: A Reformed Perspective on its Historical Development (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
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2.6. Conclusion Would it be presumptuous to imagine Cunningham nodding his head in
agreement while reading a letter his friend Charles Hodge wrote to him in
August 1857?
I have had but one object in my professional career and as a writer, and that is to state and to vindicate the doctrines of the Reformed Church. I have never advanced a new idea, and have never aimed to improve on the doctrines of our fathers. Having become satisfied that the system of doctrines taught by the symbols of the Reformed Church is taught in the Bible, I have endeavoured to sustain it, and am willing to believe where I cannot understand.126
Cunningham stood firm on the feste Burg of classical Reformed theology;
imbued with an evangelical pathos that this theology best expressed the
Bible’s message of God’s redemption of sinners, he propagated it with his full
powers. The virtues inhering in the scholastic method characteristic of
Reformed orthodoxy find reflection in their nineteenth-century epigone:
doctrinal theology as a revealed science, undertaken for the edification of the
church; Scripture as the principium unicum theologiae; doctrinal expression
which, if colourless, was lean and clear, and supposed the logical coherence of
Christian belief; the art of controversy for the sake of truth—hard-hitting but
fair-handed.127
Yet the limitations of Reformed orthodoxy are no less obvious. The
doyen of the study of Protestant orthodoxy, Richard Muller, makes the
significant (though often overlooked) point that Reformed orthodoxy was a
living theology. Rooted in the theological vision of the Reformation, it
remained in extensive dialogue with church tradition, and kept abreast of
current philosophical and philological trends.128 This was no longer the case
two hundred and fifty years later, whatever features of enduring value it might
possess. Cunningham rightly recognized that Reformation teaching was 1982). To take another example, a collection of quality essays on the “modern development” of Reformed theology, David F. Wells, ed., Reformed Theology in America: A History of its Modern Development, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1997), is clearly uneasy with the fact that development might imply progress beyond strict confessional boundaries. 126 Cited in Hodge, The Life of Charles Hodge, 430. 127 Cunningham, who despised the English mind as insipid, challenged Tractarians to study Bellarmine to learn the art of theological controversy as well as the integrity of the Catholic system he felt they handled sloppily. 128 Muller, PRRD, 1: 219-20.
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systematized and clarified in the confessions and theological institutiones of
the seventeenth century. Indeed, he interpreted this process as a legitimate
development, and contested attempts to exploit the nagging discrepancies
between the Reformers and their descendants. Yet, by honouring Reformed
orthodoxy as a final achievement—or, at least, a conditionally final
achievement—he rendered it a monument. “They’re sayin, the we are trade
eshanists,” wrote a Free Churchman, tongue in cheek, some years after
Cunningham’s death. “What this beg wurd manes, am tould is, that we belave
what oor faithers belaved. An’ why should we no? Uf oor fairthers wus richt,
it canna make us rong to be like them.”129 Reformed orthodoxy might be
repristinated in the nineteenth century, as Cunningham and not a few other FC
theologians attempted, but it could not be repeated. The intellectual ferment in
Europe in the later seventeenth and eighteenth centuries that had unleashed
formidable scientific, philosophical, and historical challenges to orthodoxy,
made that impossible.
Perhaps Cunningham’s dilettantish account of the genesis of doctrine
shows the ditch between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries to be
dauntingly wide. Protestant orthodoxy bequeathed to him an unassailable
scriptural principle of a perspicuous, sufficient, and perfect Bible. Such a
principle would not budge before Newman’s argument that the desultory and
diffusive nature of revelation makes probable a development of doctrine under
an infallible guide. Abetted by the Scottish Realism that Cunningham imbibed
as an evangelical and a Scotsman, this principle commandeered a confident
induction of the body of orthodox Christian doctrine seemingly independent of
the context provided by either theological tradition or historical location. Yet,
herein lies a decisive reproof of his account of the formation of Christian
doctrine. The Reformers enthroned the Bible, interpreted in its strictly
grammatical sense, as the norma normans of the church’s doctrine and
practice. This enabled the reformation and modification of the doctrinal
tradition, even as the basic veracity of orthodoxy, the general coherence of the
sacra pagina and sacra doctrina, was not doubted (see 1.3.1). Only under fire
from seventeenth-century Socinians and freethinkers, and the Enlightenment
129 Anonymous, A Purteekler Acoont o’ the Last Assembly. By Wan o’ the Hielan’ Host, 3.
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thereafter, did it become apparent that the exposition of the Bible according to
historical and grammatical exegesis was, in fact, often hard-pressed to
reproduce orthodoxy. Critical scholarship was showing traditional Christian
belief to be a complex product, founded on a sacred text that prior theologians
did not think exhausted by its sensus literalis, forged in unique circumstances
over a centuries-long process, fed by sundry influences. The Scripture
principle deployed by Protestants against the doctrinal corruptions and
devotional abuses within medieval Christendom, which was at the same time
its shield from Trent’s retort of innovation, was eventually exploited to drive a
wedge between Scripture and classical Christian doctrine.130
It is not that Cunningham was unaware of this critical literature but,
rather, that he conceded much of it, detached the basic system of orthodoxy
from the intellectual, social, cultural, and especially ecclesiastical context of
its historical formation, then discovered it more or less intact in Scripture. This
is egregious. It entailed, simultaneously, an overinvestment of the Bible and an
underestimation of the irreducibly churchly and historical genesis of Christian
doctrine. Further, making “neology” or German infidelity the scapegoat for the
“presumption against dogma” 131 which Cunningham feared was creeping
among his contemporaries obscured what this trend owed to his own
Protestant forebears.
John Henry Newman’s An Essay on the Development of Christian
Doctrine exposed the evangelical and Reformed understanding of how the
church formed its doctrines as “unreal”, along with all other theological
accounts of doctrine that failed to reckon with Christianity’s earthly and often
earthy existence.132 Newman was not a good historian by either nineteenth-or
twenty-first-century standards—as with Cunningham, it is hard to escape the
conclusion that he ultimately sought to overcome history through dogma.133
130 Muller, PRRD, 2: 341, 442-55. 131 Rainy and Mackenzie, 506. 132 Ker’s biography of Newman frequently touches upon his passion for the ‘real’ as opposed to theoretical. 133 E.g. Mark Pattison, Memoirs of an Oxford Don (1885; reprint, London: Cassell, 1988), 100-112; Rowan Williams, Arius: Heresy and Tradition (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1987), 4-6; Turner, John Henry Newman, 479-96; Alister E. McGrath, Iustitia Dei: A History of the Christian Doctrine of Justification, 3rd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2005), 295-307, judges Newman’s historical analysis of Reformation teaching in his Lectures on Justification (1837) inept, if not deliberately dishonest.
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But while still a Tractarian he became cognizant that the trend to approach
Christianity historically made the problem of change and discontinuity in the
history of the church and its doctrines unavoidable. If the Tractarian via media
was uselessly aseptic for the messiness of church history, evangelicalism’s
sola scriptura was too thin to bear the full weight of Christian doctrine and too
condescending of the church’s history to admit its assistance. Newman’s
Essay proposed a solution to be found, at least partially, in history itself: a
theory of development promised a frank reckoning with history and the
preservation of the church’s vast doctrinal tradition. The Essay’s legacy for
Victorian theology supports Gerhard Ebeling’s contention that “the service
performed by the study of church history is the disturbance it causes. History
makes a naïve theological understanding of ourselves impossible and calls into
question the sense of our theological studies.”134 Newman’s theory of
development burst the hemmed and tidy concepts of doctrine held by his
contemporaries and made the fact of the change and contextuality of the
church and its belief both uncomfortably present and unavoidably pressing.
For attempts by FC and UP theologians to think through the
implications of “the category of the historical” for the origin and nature of
church doctrine, An Essay on the Development of Doctrine needs to be
considered alongside its 1846 review by Cunningham. It disturbed
evangelical Presbyterians, but so too, in short time, did some of the traditional
Protestant assumptions that governed Cunningham’s response and underlay
his other works. His trenchant rejection of a theory of doctrinal development
and reaffirmation of the Protestant doctrine of Scripture and its concomitant
church historiography laid bare the ill preparedness of Reformed theology to
reckon with the challenge of history for doctrine with which Newman had
struggled. In effect, Cunningham presented a choice to posterity. Given the
sine non qua status for Protestant theology of the belief that “Holy Scripture
containeth all things necessary to salvation” (Thirty Nine Articles, 6), and
given the fact of the development of church doctrine of which Newman argued
so convincingly (even if Presbyterians never became convinced of his case for
why and how it developed), the choice lay either in revamping traditional
134 Gerhard Ebeling, Word and Faith, trans. James Leitch (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1963), 429.
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doctrines under the auspices of the recovery of the beliefs of the historically-
reconstructed church of the New Testament, or granting church tradition a
greater role in the development of doctrine from a sufficient Scripture.
That German Dogmengeschichten would allow this tradition to pursue
both ‘solutions’ was something neither Cunningham nor Newman could have
predicted. In any case, Presbyterianism in Scotland and beyond would not
encounter such a deliberately anti-historicist reckoning of church doctrine and
the history of theology as Historical Theology —at least not of such muscle
and magnitude—until the neo-orthodox revolt in the twentieth century.
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Chapter 3
Oxford—Erlangen—Edinburgh: Robert Rainy on the Historicity of Church and Doctrine
“Then came a change, as all things human change.” - Alfred Lord Tennyson1
3.1. Introduction “The philosopher need address himself only to the best minds of an
age—perhaps only to the best minds of all times. The historian of ideas must
also consider the representative minds of an age, which may be the ‘second-
best’ minds.”2 Robert Rainy, the FC’s mastermind in what he himself
described as an age of violent change and confusion,3 was a second-best mind
of first-rate importance for the Presbyterian tradition in the Victorian era and
beyond. Despite attaining a chair at New College at the age of thirty-six,
Rainy has left a skimpy paper trail for scholars of Christian thought to
follow.“His ambition was to study and teach or write Church history, his task,
to make it,” declared his biographer Carnegie Simpson.4 With only a little
push, then, does his life slide into “ecclesiastical biography”, and following
Simpson’s lead this is exactly what historians have done. Rainy is so entwined
with the course of the FC in Victorian Britain that he becomes decidedly one-
sided: ecclesiastical; his mind is so representative of his age and his church as
to become patently obvious.
The customary portrait of Rainy needs to be redrawn. He deserves
credit as a thinker, who took the lead among nineteenth-century evangelical
theologians in confronting the claims of history for church doctrine. Although
a thinker of far less consequence, Rainy can be considered the Newman of
1 From “Enoch Arden,” in Alfred Tennyson: A Critical Edition of the Major Works (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2000). 2 Gertrude Himmelfarb, Victorian Minds (London: Weldenfeld & Nicolson, 1968), x-xi. 3 Robert Rainy, Address to the Students of the New College, Edinburgh, At the Close of the Session 1881-82 (Edinburgh: n.p. 1882), 5-6. 4 P. Carnegie Simpson, The Life of Principal Rainy, Vol. 1 (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1909), 146.
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nineteenth-century Presbyterianism, who recognized the Janus-face of history
and refused to blink from its manifold, often contradictory, repercussions on
the Christian faith; like Newman, he responded in such a way as to try to make
history ultimately enhance rather than diminish classical Christianity.5 His
significant ecclesiastical career—and the discord that followed his every
move—may be the best testament of this, but his few publications fixate too
on the taut meeting of centuries-old Christian belief with the historical
consciousness of his century. Most notably, his Delivery and Development of
Christian Doctrine (1874) is an initial evangelical foray into the daunting
implications for church proclamation when it is conceded that Christianity is
essentially and not just accidentally bound up in history.6 Appropriately, an
analysis of this wide-ranging work forms the centre of this chapter, even if, as
shall be hinted on occasion, the text’s Wirkungsgeschichte is in truth better
traced through the ecclesiastical-political tumult of the FC in Victorian
Scotland than the pages of its theological discourse during this time.7
Like many second-best minds (who make up for in influence what they
lack in originality), Rainy had a knack for the timely application of the first-
rate ideas of others. An analysis of DDCD thus need refer its argument to the
past, namely, the Reformed orthodoxy Rainy absorbed through Cunningham
and his FC upbringing, and to the present: Newman, of course, but especially
German theology.8 Rainy’s keen attention to the evangelische Theologie then
being imported by evangelical Scots was typical of his generation. Nor was his
indebtedness to certain types of German theology in order to fund a struggle
5 A comparison which holds in more ways than one, as suggested by James Denney’s jaded comment: Letters of Principal James Denney, D.D., to his Family and Friends, ed. James Moffat (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1922), 62. 6 Rainy, Delivery and Development of Christian Doctrine (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1874) [hereafter abbreviated as DDCD]. Union Seminary’s W. G. T. Shedd, A History of Christian Doctrine, 2 vol. (1863; reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 1998) is a genetic history of doctrine, not a study of doctrine per se. See H. W. Bowden, “W. G. T. Shedd and A. C. McGiffert on the Development of Dogma,” JPH 49 (1971): 246-65. 7 Theological contributions by Scottish Presbyterians which interact with Rainy’s thesis include John Laidlaw, “Evangelical Theology Living and Progressive,” BFER 31 (1882): 1-15; William A. Curtis, A History of Creeds and Confessions of Faith in Christendom and Beyond (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1911), 433-40; P. Carnegie Simpson, The Evangelical Church Catholic (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1934), 103-36. 8 This latter aspect is absent in the analyses of DDCD by Toon, The Development of Doctrine in the Church, 37-53, and Karlberg, “Doctrinal Development in Scripture and Tradition: a Reformed Assessment of the Church’s Theological Task.”
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with the Zeitgeist unusual. DDCD divulges a clear link of critical importance
between its author and the faculty of theology at the University of Erlangen, at
that time stamped by a vigorous, pan-German movement called neo-
Lutheranism [Neuluthertum].
Although this movement originated as a protest to the Prussian
monarchy’s heavy-handed promotion of a united Protestant church, its
hostility to all ecclesiastical, political, or theological attempts to detract from
the inviolability of the Lutheran church and confessions was not quite a
repristination of classical Lutheranism.9 For one thing, as many neo-Lutheran
theologians had been converted during the Awakening, their allegiance to the
Book of Concord was tempered by the inheritance of pietism: Biblicism, a
dynamic view of history, and a deep concern for the experience of conversion
and faith (see.1.3.3) that left them implicitly sympathetic to Schleiermacher.
His starting point for theological reflection in the religious consciousness was
given, however, an intensely evangelical interpretation as the consciousness of
being ‘born again’. At the same time, neo-Lutherans found aspects of the
romanticism then suffusing German thought and culture congenial for
conservative ends. The consubstantiation of finite reality and the Infinite
reinforced the “high” views of church, sacrament, and priestly office of the
Lutheran confessions. Catholic dogma and Lutheran doctrine was well served
by romantic philosophies of history that encouraged both reverence for past
epochs of the church and recognition of a positive development of doctrine up
to its confessional crescendo. No small feat indeed: by presupposing the nature
of the church as an organism—a fashionably romantic Leitmotif—personal
religious consciousness could even be writ large as an objective and churchly
Glaubenslehre that dovetailed with the Lutheran confessional standards (see 1.
4.5). “It is less the Lutheran inheritance which formed the conservative
character of confessionalism than its strong dependence on the romanticism of
its time,” rightly concluded Felix Flückiger.10
9 See F. W. Kantzenbach and Joachim Mehlhausen, “Neuluthertum,” in TRE 24, 327-41; Gottfried Hornig, “Die Theologie des Neuluthertum,” in HDThG 3, 174-88; Hermann Fischer, “Konfessionalismus,” in TRE 19, 426-31; Karlmann Beyschlag, Die Erlanger Theologie (Erlangen: Martin-Luther Verlag, 1993). 10 Felix Flückiger, Die Protestantische Theologie des 19. Jahrhunderts (Göttingen: Vanderhoeck & Ruprecht, 1975), 74.
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Not unsurprisingly, evangelical Presbyterians were deeply interested in
this creatively conservative movement, with whose proponents they shared
awakened hearts and a Protestant orthodox mind.11 Rainy himself seem to
have been an attentive ‘distance student’ of Erlangen’s star J. C. K. von
Hofmann (1810-77). Hofmann, whom Barth thought to be the greatest
conservative theologian of the century,12 was widely read in Scotland, and
drew scores of international students to Erlangen. DDCD explicitly refers to
Hofmann only twice, but those familiar with the unique contours of his
theology will find his fingerprints all over Rainy’s opus. And on account of
Rainy’s massive stature in Scottish church life, these fingerprints would mark
too Victorian era evangelical Presbyterianism.13 In 1857, Schaff had
bemoaned the fact that evangelicals still had their eyes shut to the great law of
development “which pervades all created life, all the works of God.”14 This
chapter finds evangelical eyes finally blinking open to the law of historical
development on revelation and Bible, church doctrine and creed, and that that
sight was given not only by Newman, as is often supposed, but also by
evangelical Germany.
3.2. Robert Rainy (1826-1906)15
Rainy was one of the many enthusiastic young men who scorned
comfortable prospects in the established church for the threadbare new FC.
When he began studies at New College in 1844 (then able to meet only in
rented rooms), he came under Cunningham’s formidable influence. His
“beloved master” imparted to him a reverence for classic Reformed theology
and the great minds of the church, and impressed upon him the essential
11 For detailed documentation see Todd Statham “‘Landlouping Students of Divinity’: Scottish Presbyterians in German Theology Faculties, c. 1840-1914,” ZKG 110 (2010): 40-65. 12 Barth, Protestant Theology in the Nineteenth Century, trans. John Bowen (1959; reprint, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 20025), 96 [hereafter abbreviated as PT]. 13 John Dickie, Fifty Years of British Theology: A Personal Retrospect (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1937), 87-8, appears to be one of the few who recognized this. 14 Schaff, Germany, 311. 15 On Rainy see W. Robertson Nicoll, “Robert Rainy,” in Princes of the Church, 192-203; Mackintosh, Principal Rainy: a Biographical Study; Simpson, The Life of Principal Rainy. For background see especially Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk; Gerald Parsons, “Victorian Britain’s Other Establishment: the Transformations of Scottish Presbyterianism,” in Religion in Victorian Britain. Volume 1: Traditions, ed. Gerald Parsons (Manchester: U of Manchester P, 1988), 117-45.
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spiritual and intellectual coherence of orthodoxy.16 Nor was their relationship
simply deferential: in 1854, Cunningham convinced Rainy to leave his small
Aberdeenshire congregation for the Free High Church, which, because it sat
on a quadrangle with New College and the General Assembly buildings,
perched the young man on the corridors of influence in the FC.
He grew into the mantle of leadership over the subsequent decade. He
was appointed to Cunningham’s old chair at New College in 1862 and soon
after received the University of Glasgow D.D. He began to exert himself in
assembly and church, lobbying in favour of union with the UPs. Rainy was
incongruously thrust into national prominence in 1872 when the dean of
Westminster Abbey, A. P. Stanley, delivered a set of lectures in Edinburgh on
the history of the Scottish church.17 The broad churchman’s addresses were
superficial—Walter Scott novels provided his knowledge of Scottish history—
but provocative: he was friendly with moderates in the C of S, and varnished
their vision of a national church that was inclusive, non-dogmatic, and
Erastian. All this was challenge thrown at the ‘fanatical’ Calvinist seceders
who comprised the other half of Scottish Protestantism. “Do you know what
they’re saying, Dr. Rainy?” goaded Alexander Whyte after the final lecture.
“They’re saying that if Cunningham had been alive, Stanley would not wait
long for his answer.”18 His demosthenic response shredded Stanley’s slack
research and Whiggish historiography, and reproached his English and
Anglican condescension.19 More importantly, he resolutely opposed the broad
church pursuit of church unity at the cost of doctrine and of religious influence
without first converting the country to Christ. Popular support for the C of S’s
disestablishment was kindled in the wake of his lectures.
Despite Rainy’s academic appointments–he became principal of New
College in 1874—his subsequent career was noteworthy for its ecclesiastical
rather than scholarly achievements. He led the charge to persuade Westminster
to disestablish the C of S; as chair of the FC’s Highland committee he raised
funds for church extension and mission in Gaelic-speaking areas; he 16 Noted in Rainy and Mackenzie, The Life of William Cunningham, xli. 17 For context see Stewart J. Brown, “Dean Stanley and the Controversy over his History of the Scottish Church, 1872,” RSCHS 31 (2001): 145-172. 18 Cited in Simpson, 1: 226. 19 Rainy, Three Lectures on the Church of Scotland (1872; reprint, Edinburgh: Macnivan and Wallace, 1883).
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represented the FC at international organizations and meetings; having
orchestrated union with the Reformed Presbyterians in 1876, he guided the FC
through tortuous negotiations into union with the UPs in 1900; after the House
of Lord’s decision to award all former FC property to a small group of
dissentients, he co-ordinated the new UFC’s legal and political protest. Rainy
was a three-time moderator of his church—an extraordinary occurrence in
Presbyterian polity. He was the very first FC moderator (1887) drawn from
post-Disruption ordinands, and was later called to the moderator’s chair on
two of the most critical occasions in the life of his church: as the UFC’s first
moderator (1900), and then again during its legal battle against the
“continuing” FC (1905).
Rainy led the FC like an old Highland ceann cinnidh through what
Alec Cheyne called “the Victorian religious revolution,” when every aspect of
the church’s life was passing through the fires of modernity. He cautiously
oversaw the FC’s acceptance of the use of organs and hymns in worship, and
begrudged its opening up to the theory of evolution, biblical criticism, and
revision of the Westminster Confession. His considerable diplomatic skills
were often employed to dissuade progressives from rushing ahead and
dissuade conservatives from decamping outright. This was perhaps nowhere
more evident than during the William Robertson Smith heresy trial, the most
famous such case in the nineteenth century and a defining moment in the
development of biblical studies in the English-speaking world. Robertson
Smith, a dashing young professor at the Aberdeen FC College, unleashed a
maelstrom of opposition by brashly advocating views on revelation and
biblical history that looked suspiciously German.20 Charged with trespassing
the Confession’s teaching on Scripture, his convoluted prosecution (1876-81)
ended with a solution attributable to Rainy’s savvy: the FC’s de facto
toleration of the ‘believing criticism’ that Robertson Smith promoted, but at
the cost of his teaching post. To progressives this mediating solution was
utterly underhanded; to the traditionalists it did nothing to prevent the acid of
20 See J. Sutherland Black and George Chrystal, The Life of William Robertson Smith (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1912); Simpson, 1: 284-356; H. F. Henderson, “The Robertson Smith Case,” in The Religious Controversies of Scotland (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1905), 207-230. A fine new study is Bernhard Maier, William Robertson Smith (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2009).
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higher criticism from eating away the orthodox bedrock of the FC, as was
proved less than ten years later when Rainy had to exculpate Marcus Dods and
A. B. Bruce of similar charges, and then again George Adam Smith in 1902.21
Similarly, Rainy’s masterstroke, the 1892 Declaratory Act on the
Westminster Confession, sought to conserve the authority and integrity of the
FC’s venerable subordinate standard whilst permitting wider interpretations of
those Calvinist doctrines that were vexing his generation. Conservatives,
however, especially Gaels, came to damn “Black Rainy” for allowing the old
views of the Bible and Confession to be undermined; progressives in and
outside the FC came to deem his attempt to plot a forward course for the FC in
deliberate continuity with older Calvinism proof that he remained ever
Cunningham’s protégé, “at home in the old interpretation of the old or
timeless truths of the gospel.”22 What has escaped the notice of many of
Rainy’s interpreters, however, is that this contested legacy is already presaged
in his 1873 Cunningham Lectures on the nature of doctrine, where his
mediating programme lies sketched out as blueprint for the future of doctrine
in the evangelical and Reformed tradition.
3.3. Delivery and Development of Christian Doctrine
Circumstances may have made Rainy a last minute replacement as the
incumbent of the lectureship (vii), but he was primed. Having retained from
student days his mentor’s obsession with post-Reformation polemical
theology, he had kept tabs on the fresh defences of the Roman view of
tradition and doctrinal development made by Newman and Johann Adam
Möhler.23 In fact, an early publication reviewed Newman’s Apologia, mixing
praise for the author’s Augustine-like spirituality with a Kingsley-like
reprimand for playing loose with historical facts for the sake of Roman
dogma.24 Nor had Rainy’s mind lain fallow during his pastorates: he had
21 See Henderson, “The Dods-Bruce Case,” in The Religious Controversies of Scotland, 231-270; Campbell, Fixing the Indemnity: The Life and Work of Sir George Adam Smith (1856-1942), 128-139. 22 Mackintosh, Principal Rainy, 38. 23 Like Cunningham, Rainy respected Rome greatly but Anglicanism not all (Simpson, 2: 180). 24 Rainy, “Apologia pro Vita Sua. By John Henry Newman, D. D. London: Longman & Co., 1864,” North British Review 41 (1864): 85-104.
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learned German and had poured over the church fathers. Unlike Cunningham,
Rainy was a specialist in patristic literature, and an easy intimacy with the key
documents concerning the formation and development of creeds and dogma in
the first centuries is obvious in DDCD, as is familiarity with the path-
breaking, sometimes bridge-burning German scholarship on the topic.25 He
had fretted in his inaugural lecture at New College (1862) over the tendency of
German theologians to “abridge history” by squeezing facts into speculative
theories of development. Nevertheless, their “turn to history” afforded the
contemporary church a chance to better understand its institutional life,
doctrines, worship, and mission to the world, and to comprehend ecclesiastical
life as an organic whole.26 The contrast with Cunningham’s inaugural lecture,
only a decade removed, could not be more pronounced. Rainy served notice
that under his tutelage, not only would church history be more than the study
of doctrines, it would also no longer be content with its submissive role as a
handmaid to systematic theology.
[3.3.1] Rainy began the first lecture (1-33) unapologetically.
Controversy has, after all, always swirled around the topic of church doctrine,
especially around those “doctrines pressed with a greater weight of authority”
(3) that churches have fixed as their creed and to which, traditionally, they
have imperiously demanded assent. But if previous epochs saw strife over the
legitimacy of particular doctrines, nowadays “Bible Christians” parley with
romantics and rationalists against the right of doctrine to even exist (3-4). The
modern distemper toward doctrinal religion is widespread, growing, and,
Rainy admits, not always unjustified. Theological pedantry has created a dense
system of opaque teaching that weighs heavily on believers’ consciences and
echoes weakly in their hearts. First, then, the Zeitgeist must be confronted: is
25 David F. Wright, “‘From a quarter so totally unexpected’: Translation of the Early Church Fathers in Victorian Scotland,” RSCHS 30 (2000): 124-169, finds evangelical Scots from Cunningham onwards intently studying the church fathers. He does not link this, as I do, with their ongoing attention to the problem of doctrine. 26 Rainy, Introductory Lecture, Delivered in the New College, Edinburgh, on 7th November, 1862 (Edinburgh: Johnstone, Hunter, & Co., 1862), especially 12. See further Rainy, “Modern Theological Thought,” in Report of the Proceedings of the Second General Council of the Presbyterian Alliance, Convened at Philadelphia, September, 1880, especially 77-8, 85-7 [hereafter abbreviated as “MTT”].
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Christianity properly doctrinal, or was the church’s pursuit to articulate its
experience and knowledge of God a chasing after the wind? (29).
“Christian doctrine not only has a being,” he adds, “it has a history; a
very large, various, and interesting body it is, not soon mastered, not easily
judged” (4). The church has been palpably ill at ease with this history,
although it was perhaps only after the Reformation, when Reformed and
Roman divines were both “twisting and torturing patristic testimonies” to
prove themselves the legitimate children of the church fathers (14), that
churches really began to perceive that historical inquiry was threatening not
only the pedigree of specific doctrines but also the traditional understanding of
the essence of doctrine (17-9, 298-9). Post-Reformation polemics were
trumped by the cool, critical analysis of eighteenth-century divines, who made
it undeniably clear that in all lines of orthodoxy and heterodoxy “doctrine has
been a matter of development—it has grown and become by virtue of
processes and tendencies of human minds” (25). Rainy intends, second, to
own up to what post-Enlightenment scholarship has put beyond doubt. But can
Dogmengeschichte only ever undermine the church’s historic faith as
evangelicals feared, or does “development” presuppose an integral continuity
within church proclamation? If so, how does it connect to revelation (28-9)?
The preliminary lecture promises a multi-front fight. Against those
who would flee the scarred pages of church history for the sanctuary of
Scripture, Rainy declares impossible a retreat to the Bible alone. However
much church doctrine should aspire to be biblical, it is never just a
reproduction of biblical teaching. As well, critical questions raised about the
propriety of certain doctrines dare not be ignored even by those who, in their
biblical solitude, like to think themselves unaffected (5, 33).27 Clearly,
Newman’s equation of evangelicals with Arians has hit him hard. Rainy also
wants to disarm those modern despisers of doctrinal Christianity who wield
Dogmengeschichte as a sledgehammer against the church’s historic faith.
Radical critics may be beyond repair, but perhaps renewed attention to the
form of doctrine’s delivery can embolden a restatement of its proper function
27 Rainy (291) refers this point to Athanasius, de Synodis §36, i.e., that ousia, once raised in debate over the person of Christ, subsequently could not be avoided by either party then or any church tradition now.
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in the life of the Christian community that will assuage some of the unease felt
toward doctrine and creed.28 Finally, against those who judge the historical
development of doctrine as proof that Scripture was never adequate to the
needs of the church, Rainy refuses to concede either to Rome the insufficiency
of Scripture or to rationalism denial of a real revelation conveyed by Scripture
(33, 307-8). His lectures, then, will expound this thesis: the nature of the
delivery of doctrine determines its development (32-3). This means that when
the Bible is properly understood foremost as an infallible record of God’s
great acts and deeds in history, as the second and third lectures will argue, the
fourth lecture can show how ‘salvation history’ provides the category for
understanding how church doctrine is derived from historical revelation. The
fifth lecture will critique past and current theories of doctrinal development
from the standpoint of his thesis. Sixth, Rainy lays out some principles for
ensuring that the church’s confession of God’s saving acts in history is ever
contemporary and continuous with past proclamation.
[3.3.2] The second lecture (34-74) peruses the Old Testament to
discover what it teaches about doctrine’s original delivery. Presuppositions
brought to the task are deeply traditional. Rainy brooks little sympathy for
modern critics who impute Israel’s religion to their heightened awareness of
divine immanence in history (312). Jehovah wants to be known, and only he
can make himself known to minds and hearts darkened by sin (42). This he
has done by purposeful disclosure in human history, and Rainy finds no
compelling reason not to call it supernatural (315-7). God’s revelation has
been faithfully recorded as a narrative that mirrors the canonical Old
Testament—Rainy commits, in fact, to a doctrine of plenary inspiration (175,
309, 316). Accordingly, his perusal yields the conclusion, no less traditional,
that God’s revelation to Israel contains “teaching so permanent in its matter,
so direct and unambiguous in its terms, and so precise in the convictions it was
fitted to produce, that we may reasonably call it doctrinal” (71). This teaching
falls into three themes in particular: the character of God, the malignity of sin,
and hope of good to come (43). He also judges the church fathers and his
28 Compare with Bernhard Lohse, Epochen der Dogmengeschichte, 6th ed. (Stuttgart: Kreuz, 1988), 12.
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Reformed forbearers right to have looked and listened for “the footsteps of
Christ” in the Old Testament (68, also 35, 72, 317).
Unmistakably, however, Rainy is taking leave of the manner in which
evangelicals and Presbyterians had typically found doctrine and Christ in the
Old Testament. The keyword is now “historical communion” (39). Divine
disclosure into the warp and woof of history was inevitable, given God’s
desire to relate with those who are “radically creatures of days and years and
generations” (39, 41).29 The object of revelation further determined the
specific method of revelation. He did not reveal his character, his abhorrence
of sin and unrighteousness, and his gracious promises of blessing, fully and
instantly, for God’s revelatory words and deeds were always accommodated to
Israel’s historical context, and were progressively disclosed in such a way that
the keynote teachings resounded evermore limpid and loud over the course of
its history (35-6, 64). As a result, “when we speak of progressive lessons, a
distinction should be made,” he cautions.
There be might a process of teaching by successive lessons, so delivered that each lesson should be abstract and general,—‘doctrinal’ so we say,—coming as a maxim that shall always be applicable to that case as long as human knowledge subsists under its earthly considerations. It might conceivably have been so; but such was not the divine method. From the first, God has dealt with men in the concrete. He has dealt with them about facts; He has taught them through events,—those facts and events being the centre and the hinge of His teachings” (36-his emphasis).
Revelation effects—and here Rainy discharges Newman’s loaded word—a
“kind of impression” of who God is, what he has done and promises to do,
based on the facts of his speech and deeds in the history of Israel (54-5); this
impression was intensified and clarified as his people marched through new
times and places, and supplemented by further revelation (45).30 The people of
Israel knew and felt the drift but not the final destination of God’s acts of
promise, covenant, law, kingship, exile, and blessing. As a consequence,
divine teaching in the Old Testament is definite but incomplete, for God was
always “moving on, with sedulous intent which never relaxes” (66-7). Thus,
29 See also Rainy, Introductory Lecture, 3. 30 Thirty years later, James Orr, “Review: The Ancient Catholic Church. By Robert Rainy, D.D.,” Expository Times 13 (1902): 305-8, remarks upon Rainy’s ongoing use of ‘impression’ to describe the impact of revelation.
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the church should only speak of Old Testament “doctrine”, or use the Old
Testament to proof its doctrine, with a tentativeness born from the recognition
of a revelation fully bound to the contingency of Israel’s historical existence.
Yet even the deployment of “impression” is a guise for what Rainy
really wants to do, namely, reconstitute the value of the Old Testament for
Christian doctrine on the basis of Heilsgeschichte. God has revealed himself
and his will not foremost in propositions but in and through historical acts and
deeds. Israel’s beliefs about the meaning of God’s words and deeds, their hope
for the fulfilment of his promissory words and actions, should be considered
as “rising out of, and returning into, a historical process” that anticipates
Christ (67). This might seem banal. Versions of salvation history, after all,
have had long (albeit uneven lives) in recent theology and biblical studies. But
in mid-Victorian Britain it was daring and fresh. It was also ‘made in
Germany’. Nineteenth-century German theologians were creatively revamping
the older conceptions of salvation history of seventeenth-century Reformed
federal theologians and German pietists (see 1.3.2). In fact, it was Hofmann
who coined the word ‘Heilsgeschichte’; it received at his hands its most
accomplished nineteenth-century treatment.31 As noted in the first chapter,
Newman’s use of the ambiguous notion of revelation as an “impression” did
not affect his belief that the Christian religion was essentially dogmatic.
Hofmann’s understanding of salvation history, at which we will now glance,
enabled Rainy to take a step of more radical consequence for church doctrine.
[3.3.3] Like many Christian thinkers in his uncertain age, Hofmann
was concerned to secure faith’s certainty.32 This led him to describe
Christianity as foremost fact rather than a set of doctrines, a moral ethos, or an
31 A. Josef Greig, “A Critical Note on the Origin of the Term Heilsgeschichte,” ET 87 (1976): 118-9; Hans-Joachim Kraus, Die biblische Theologie: ihre Geschichte und Problematik (Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener, 1970), 247-53. More generally, see Friedrich Mildenberger, “Heilsgeschichte,” RGG4 3, 1584-6. 32 On Hofmann see Barth, Protestant Theology, 593-60; Rohls, Protestantische Theologie der Neuzeit, 1: 564-6, 681-9; Matthew L. Becker, “Appreciating the Life and Work of Johann v. Hofmann,” LQ 17 (2003): 177-93; Jörg Lauster, Prinzip und Methode. Die Transformation des protestantischen Schriftprinzips durch der historische Kritik von Schleiermacher bis zu Gegenwart (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2004), 163-84; Eberhard Hahn, “J. Chr. K. von Hofmanns Programm theologischer Erneuerung. Dargestellt anhand seines Werkes ‘Der Schriftbeweis’,” in Dein Wort ist die Wahrheit, ed. Eberhard Hahn et al. (Wuppertal: Brockhaus, 1997), 65-82.
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institution (although it included all these aspects).33 And like many sons of the
Awakening, it was the experienced fact of being united with Christ as Lord
and Redeemer that provided the starting point for reflection upon faith. This
led him to proceed from personal religious consciousness to full-fledged
orthodoxy, in concert with the actuality of a converted life—what he called the
Tatbestand [‘the facts of the matter’] of spiritual experience—that is to say,
that a Christian does not come to faith through the inductive study of the Bible
or by submitting to the dogmas of the church, but comes back to these things
upon having experienced fullness of new life in Christ, and having been made
certain of the reality of that experience through the inner testimony of the
Spirit. In this way, the experience of spiritual rebirth connects back to the
histories of Israel and Jesus Christ recorded in the Bible and summarized in
the Lutheran confessions. Hofmann brazenly claimed that the whole body of
Christian doctrine, from Trinity to final judgement, could be unpacked from
the Tatbestand, i.e., the fact of the experience of new life in Christ. “I, as a
Christian, am for me the theologian, the own material of my science…Out of
the self-certainty of his experience of new birth, the theologian gathers ‘the
doctrinal whole’ that then receives its confirmation through the proof of
Scripture.”34
Not surprisingly, Hofmann’s decision to proceed with Schleiermacher
by way of the religious consciousness has been pilloried as an extreme
example of pietistic subjectivism. This is not quite fair. Christian experience,
specifically, the profundity of being ‘born again’, is not self-generated; it
comes to the self from outside it, and continually refers back to the reality that
created it. Hofmann writes: “Christianity rests initially on the present Christ
who has the historical Christ as his presupposition and who himself refers
back to this historical presupposition of his presence.”35 True, the whole
Christian doctrinal tradition can be first discovered and then delineated from
the fact of being ‘born again’, but the experience of being united with Christ is
not merely the consciousness but the fact of it, which substantially refers to
33 Hofmann, Enzyklopädie der Theologie (Nordlingen: Beck, 1879), 3. This posthumous work helpfully introduces his method and theology. 34 Hofmann, Der Schriftbeweis, 2nd ed. (Nordlingen: Beck, 1857), 1: 10, 31, cited in Hornig, “Die Theologie des Neuluthertum,” 183. See also Enzyklopädie, 27-36. 35 Enzyklopädie, 28.
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the historical reality behind. Hence his ‘Scriptural proof’ (Schriftbeweis) that
prevents his subjective starting point from adducing an idiosyncratic version
of Christian faith: introspection upon the individual experience of new life in
Christ will recapitulate the ecclesial explication of the very same experience; it
will then find itself rooted in and conformed to the scriptural record of God’s
saving acts in history.
The factuality of the believer’s union with Christ (Tatbestand) and the
historical deeds and acts (Taten) of salvation which are recorded in the Bible
are integrated in the fact (Tatsache) of Heilsgeschichte, which has as its goal
the union of humankind and God in Jesus Christ.36 Hofmann’s understanding
of salvation history rejected pietism’s version of the pilgrim’s progress of
God’s people through history for an exhilarating vision of world history as the
progressive taking up of all humankind into the Trinitarian life through the
incarnate Son.37 History is the execution of divine predestination, the triune
God’s self-determination to love outside the divine self and bring that other
into union with him. As “the self-presentation [Selbtsdarstellung] of Christ in
the world is the essential content of all history,”38 world history is subsumed
under salvation history, for “all things great and small serve the purpose of
uniting the world to its head, Christ.”39 History not only contained prophetic
revelation of the coming of the Saviour—witness the half-dreams of the
heathens who found Christ in the natural world and in moral conscience, in
addition to the increasingly definitive predictions of Israel’s prophets—it is
prophecy. It manifested progressive forms of the union of God and humankind
that pointed to its centre and consummation, Jesus Christ, or perhaps its
proleptic conclusion, since Christ is the proof and model of the full
eschatological union of humankind with God.40
36 Hofmann, Weissagung und Erfüllung im Alte und Neue Testament (Nordlingen: Beck, 1841), 1: 55 [hereafter abbreviated as WE]. 37 Among others, Becker, 187-89, likens it in form and scope to Pannenberg’s. Surprisingly, in his article “Geschichte/Geschichtsschreibung/Geschichtsphilosophie VIII. Systematisch-Theologie,” Pannenberg misreads Hofmann as ghettoizing salvation history in pietistic fashion. 38 WE, 1: 40. 39 WE, 1: 7; also WE, 1: 58. 40 The phrase “proleptic conclusion” [vorläufiger Abschluß] is used by Rohls and others, but not by Hofmann himself as far as I can tell.
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Rainy detached Hofmann’s vision of Heilsgeschichte from its
Trinitarian basis. Such a God-intoxicated vision of history—so steeped in
philosophical idealism41—must have staggered an evangelical Presbyterian
raised abstemiously on Scotch Common Sense and Calvinism’s sharp
distinction between the civitas Dei and the civitas terrena. But his remark
before the 1880 assembly of the Presbyterian Alliance, that “thoughts, which
in Germany would be weighed in a speculative system, exert their influence
among us in a looser, but an equally effective way,” carries a biographical
intimation.42 It appears that he took several “thoughts” from Hofmann that
provided the crucial lineaments of his thesis and, therefore, demand a closer
look: the nature of Scripture, the delivery of doctrine in Scripture, and the
dynamic of biblical history.
Hofmann was not as dutiful to orthodoxy as his neo-Lutheran
affiliation might suggest. He charged orthodoxy with partaking of the same
error as rationalism, namely, ransacking the Bible to find isolated truths, then
enshrining them as timeless expressions of the divine mind.43 When
Christianity is defined as a set of dogmas, the Bible is inevitably read as a
compendium of inspired teaching—the Old Testament has been especially ill
served by this traditional habit. Classical exegetes hear of Christ in prophecies
or see him in types floating free from historical context. Functionally,
revelation comes not in the sweep of Israel’s history but scattered in pieces:
allegories, occasional events, or rare flashes of clear teaching in the midst of
strange speech.44 Hofmann insisted that the whole history of the chosen people
is the growth of the union of God and humankind toward fullness in Christ.45
Its record, the Bible, is a divine memorial of God’s great acts and deeds for the 41 Hofmann did his doctorate in history at Berlin under Leopold von Ranke; like other Erlangen theologians he was influenced by Schelling’s philosophy. 42 “MTT,” 82. Gustav Oehler, Theologie des Alten Testaments, 2 vol. (Stuttgart: Steinkopf, 1873-1874) [ET: Theology of the Old Testament, trans. E. D. Smith (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1880)], was another Heilsgeschichte theologian to whom Rainy occasionally referred in DDCD. I maintain the ultimately greater importance of Hofmann for DDCD on account of the circumstantial reasons noted earlier, as well as the fact that Oehler himself was deeply influenced by Hofmann (Kraus, Die biblische Theologie, 99-106). 43 WE, 1: 7, 33. 44 WE, 1: 3. Berlin professor and neo-Lutheran E. W. Hengstenberg’s massive Christologie des Alten Testaments [ET: Christology of the Old Testament and a Commentary on the Messianic Predictions, 4 vol., trans. Theodore Meyer (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1854-8)], a work then widely read in the evangelical world, comes under heavy fire for its “dogmatic” approach. 45 WE, 1: 36.
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redemption of the world and the original impact of that history. The church’s
present experience of salvation is rooted in and measured by it, and from it, it
takes heart for the future.46 Scripture’s authority resides in its exclusive
recording of the facts of salvation history that function as the measure for the
experience of those incorporated into that historical continuum. Its sufficiency
lies in its accurate recounting of salvation history, rather than any sleeve of
doctrines it purportedly contains as expressive of the divine counsel.
Hofmann insisted his theological method was simply a new way of
expressing old truth. Its appeal for those who wanted a biblical and Christ-
centred faith that took seriously the traditional Protestant religious experience
of sin and grace is obvious. He never did write the Glaubenslehre his
presuppositions seemed to demand of him, Barth shrewdly pointed out.
Instead, his great work, Der Schriftbeweis, devoted twenty pages to unfolding
the doctrinal whole of Christianity from experience, and 1600 pages to
examining this body in the Bible! He concluded that Hofmann was a pietistic
devotee of the Bible who played at apologetics in order to appear current.47
Indeed, Hofmann intended the resolutely historical understanding of revelation
at the heart of his version of salvation history to secure for his century the old
Protestant esteem for Scripture’s unique revelatory function and normative
authority for the church.
Moreover, he was no despiser of doctrine. He was deeply (though,
unlike most neo-Lutherans, not slavishly) attached to the Book of Concord
because it best reflects the Tatbestand of salvation and Taten of salvation
history. For him, salvation history was primary; doctrine was second order
reflection by the church upon God’s great acts and words in history. Yet even
if the Bible, properly speaking, does not yield a system of doctrines, doctrine
is the inevitable and appropriate outcome of Christians’ introspection upon the
fact of their faith, and it is the essential self-articulation of the church’s part
and place in salvation history.48 Further, the classical Christian insistence that
46 Enzyklopädie, 252. British evangelicals were aware that Hofmann’s view was eliciting controversy among neo-Lutherans: August Dieckhoff, “System and Scripture- Dr. v. Hofmann,” BFER 10 (1861): 553-75. 47 Barth, PT, 597. 48 Enzyklopädie, 3-7.
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Jesus Christ is the centre of Scripture received a new lease through this
version of Heilsgeschichte. Beleaguered pastors in mid-century Germany,
caught between a critical onslaught upon traditional exegesis of the Old
Testament and Schleiermacher’s outright dismissal of the Old Testament for
the purposes of the church, were deeply grateful to Hofmann for giving them
back an Old Testament from which Christ could be preached without recourse
to theological obscurantism, for Scripture’s historicity was acknowledged, and
historical investigation of it encouraged, because the onus of revelation had
shifted from proof-texts to the whole history of Israel.49
[3.3.4] Hofmann’s influence exerts itself pointedly in the third lecture
(75-104), as Rainy turns to the stage of the “history of redemption”—
presumably how he translated Heilsgeschichte (e.g., 86, 95, 359)—found in
the New Testament. Indeed, if the dynamic of redemptive history is promise
and fulfilment, then the New Testament records the very climax of history, for
God’s promissory acts and transactions in Israel’s history find their terminus
in Christ—incarnate, crucified, risen, and ascended in glory (77). Rainy
unequivocally rules out a progression of revelation beyond the apostolic
witness to Christ (77-78). That revelation is finished, however, does not mean
it is frozen. He waxes eloquently of revelation as “fathomless fountains”
(100), capable of “endless progress” (104) through the church’s worshipful
contemplation of it; Scripture is “pregnant” with fresh teaching capable of
guiding the church through the travails of each and every epoch (105). Such
exuberant description parrots Newman, but is Rainy saying anything different
from what traditional Reformed theologians like Cunningham claimed in less
efflorescent language (see 2.5)? Likewise, while the pattern of promise and
fulfilment seems imitative of Hofmann’s Weissagung und Erfüllung, it is far
from novel. It frequents the spiritual exegesis of some church fathers; more
notably, the federal theologians of the seventeenth century sought a
methodology centred on the biblical covenants as the progressive fulfilment of
God’s promise of salvation.50
49 Hahn, “J. Chr. K. von Hofmanns Programm theologischer Erneuerung,” 72. 50 Christian Link, “Föderaltheologie,” RGG4 3, 172-5; Wilhelm Neuser, “Die Föderaltheologie des Johann Coccejus,” in HDThG 2, 343-7; Eberhard Busch, “Der Beitrag und Ertrag der
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Rainy breaks new ground in the evangelical and Reformed tradition in
the radical degree to which he sinks revelation into historical reality.
Revelation is salvation history. This means that the Bible is not a syllabus of
doctrines but a record of salvation history (99). It tells of who God is by what
he has done, how his deeds have seized the hearts and minds of those who first
witnessed them (81, 85, 101). Scripture is essentially a history book, he
declares, a record of the decisive persons, facts, and events of the story of
salvation which always presupposes past history as the arena of God’s saving
acts, tracks the consequences of those acts into the present moment, and awaits
the realization of salvation at history’s end (80).
The first great effect of his claim is the revamping of the traditional
Protestant attributes of Scripture in light of the Bible’s nature in respect of
salvation history. Rainy has sidled away from Cunningham over to Hofmann.
Scripture has singular authority in the church because nowhere else is there a
“sealed and unalterable record” of the facts of redemption (78, 104). Scripture
is sufficient because it is an accurate and immutable record of salvation history
(80, 350-1). Rainy makes this move so quickly it is easy to miss its
significance: the long, noisy debate between Rome and the Reformed over
whether Scripture is sufficient to deliver those doctrines or dogmas deemed
essential is muted. As a record of historical events rather than a fixed itinerary
of teachings, Scripture is divinely adapted to be a fertile and flexible standard
as God’s people themselves develop in history.51 At every stage of the
church’s life the historical facts of redemption, especially those clustered
around the incarnation and death of Jesus Christ (82), “should lay hold of their
mind, mould their thoughts and their impressions, and become a means of
teaching, a foundation of it, which nothing else could be” (85). These are facts
of such power and truth that they seize the whole person (96), facts of such
magnitude that the light the church shines on them from sundry vantage points
of its history never fully pierce their depths or circumscribe their breadth
(81,101). As a result, the self-serving reconstructions of a regula fidei from
Föderaltheologie für ein geschichtliches Verständnis der Offenbarung,” in Oikonomia: Heilsgeschichte als Thema der Theologie (Hamburg: Herbert Reich, 1967), 171-190. 51 Compare the similar statement in WE, 1: 44.
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early church documents offered up by competing church traditions to seal their
own similitude to the golden age of the church are disrated.52
The perspicuity of Scripture is likewise rooted in the historicity of
revelation. Because revelation addresses persons in history it addresses
persons in the organic totality of life—head, heart, and hands (93-96). The
record of salvation history thus encompasses God’s mighty deeds for the
salvation of his people, as well as their memory of these events, their attempts
at covenantal fidelity, their hopes for the future. Christians who would
struggle to understand an abstraction or a theory can grasp the significance of
the fundamental historical events of redemption, for even the lowliest believer
shares the same orientation to the “knowledge of realities” as those to whom
revelation was first given (98). Rainy’s vocation as a churchman rather than a
scholar surely abets this persistent emphasis on the history of redemption as
revelation to the whole person and every person.
Having argued that the Bible, and the New Testament specifically, is
foremost a transcript of the facts of salvation history, Rainy carefully—though
not always consistently—determines the extent to which doctrine can be said
to be in the New Testament. He lapses on occasion into the older language of a
“system of teaching” or a “body of doctrine” in the New Testament. On the
whole, however, he vehemently maintains that Scripture should never be
approached as a compendium of dogmas or doctrines (102). That God
disclosed himself and his purposes in history has endowed revelation with a
remarkable dynamism and richness that the older theology simply could not
handle. There, the historical nature of revelation went typically unrecognized,
when not suppressed. One result of the domination by this propositional view
of revelation was to leave churches constantly confusing a just concern to
protect the finality of revelation with the finality of their own dogmas, creeds,
or traditions.53 Another was to leave historical revelation pounded flat and
painted monochrome for the sake of a system. The Tübingen school may be
fatally wrong on many things, he avers, but give them credit for perceiving the 52 Rainy has a running battle with Tractarians and the Anglican Newman in the endnotes (357-63). 53 Furthermore, when Scripture is understood primarily as a book of doctrines, doctrinal development is narrowed to the deduction of secondary and tertiary doctrines from scriptural doctrines or first principles (102). Rainy will pick up this thread of argument in the fifth lecture.
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messy richness of a revelation that is authentically historical. A concept of
revelation both unashamedly supernatural and historical need not shy from
admitting that Peter or Paul or John interpreted the facts of salvation according
to considerations of location, need, and personality. The manifoldness of the
biblical canon, in fact, reflects the fact that salvation history itself combines
the unity of truth appropriate to the purposes of its subject, God, and the
diversity appropriate to the manner of revelation, history (85-87, 105).54
Rainy’s focus throughout lies on the sequence of historical fact to
interpretation as essential and exemplary. New Testament “doctrine” is
enmeshed in historical narrative and loses meaning apart from this point of
reference to the acts and transactions of God in history (76-78, 81, 85, 99-
100). The teaching of Jesus and the apostles’ teaching about Jesus clarifies and
deepens the teachings of the Old Testament, and the great Old Testament
themes regarding God and redemption become more intelligible and profound
in the New Testament (79, 89). Yet at no point can this teaching be absolved
from the historical narrative. “The grand distinction of the Christian
revelation,” he insists, “is that the facts which lie at the foundation of it are the
adequate and eternal embodiment of those truths, not imperfect and transient
illustrations of them” (101-his emphasis, also 81-82).55 From this history,
which knits together the historical facts of revelation and the initial impression
of divine history in the minds of God’s people (what could be called biblical
doctrine), church doctrine emerges (100-05)—what will be addressed at length
in the next lecture. Not only is Rainy, like Hofmann, making a tacit distinction
between biblical theology and systematic theology, biblical doctrine and
church doctrine, he is exhorting his tradition to better distinguish its humble
house of doctrine from the superlative building materials.56
54 Hofmann makes the same argument regarding the canon. See especially Hahn, “J. Chr. K. von Hofmanns Programm theologischer Erneuerung.” Of course, Rainy’s (and Hofmann’s, for that matter) appeal to canon assumed a sharp divide between the inspired canon and the writings of the Apostolic Fathers (e.g., 343, 360); nor could it be perturbed yet by the plethora of non-canonized Christian and Gnostic texts still awaiting discovery. 55 Rainy uses this fact-interpretation sequence to challenge both rationalist or orthodox divines who pluck eternal verities from the New Testament as well as the Tübingen school, who argue counter-intuitively that Paul invented Christianity, i.e., that the Epistles have priority over the Gospels (83, 85-8). 56 Lauster, Prinzip und Methode, 173.
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[3.3.5] A voluble fourth lecture (106-74) makes explicit what is at
stake for church proclamation when it is acknowledged that revelation is
embodied primarily as historical acts, i.e., what Rainy calls the historical
delivery of doctrine. It handles the church’s reception of the biblical testimony
and its consequent formation into church doctrine from two angles,
programmatic and apologetic. If the Bible is a repository of doctrines then the
church’s task would be elementary—it could even include verbatim repetition
of biblical formularies (111-3). On the contrary, doctrine is forged in the fires
of believing minds, thinking, praying, wrestling with the meaning and impact
of salvation history, recorded in Scripture as an historical narrative of
staggering depth and dimension, whose plotline tumbles and turns over
thousands of years through lands and cultures strange and distant. Rainy’s
definition of doctrine as “determinations of what men are led to hold to be true
on the authority of Revelation” (107) presupposes revelation as a narrative of
historical events rather than a collection of polished or semi-cut doctrines, and
underscores—specifically the keyword “determination”—the formation of
doctrine as an involved human process. Older theology rendered revelation
overly objective in its delivery and overly cognitive in its reception. The
Christian mind was a passive recipient of the clear and lofty doctrines revealed
in Scripture. Yet, “revelation…will not let him be passive. It solicits, awakes,
exhorts him; by influences which seize him on every side, it sets him in
motion.” A mind enlivened by the Spirit is compelled to investigate the plot
and path of the story into which it has now been integrated (110, 128). But
even an awakened mind cannot comprehend the facts of redemptive history
apart from the normal processes of human thought. “I must select words which
enable my mind to mark how it is taught to think, as well as how it is taught to
feel or act” (115), he avows.
This utterance divulges the lure the Erlangen theologians’ so-called
theology of fact must have held for Rainy. “Historical communion” is not an
excuse to slough off the objectivity of revelation. On the contrary, it secures
an objective, supernatural revelation and combines it with attention to the
subjective side of Christian belief—what orthodoxy has been loath to admit in
his estimate. First, it admits the significant role of the believer in creating
doctrine via the mind’s determination of revealed facts. Doctrine is not simply
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the message of Scripture. It is rather “our holding up as ours the truth, made
ours, which the Father of Lights delivered to us as His” (117). And not even
those who scorn theological subtleties for simple biblical expressions, he adds,
can avoid re-embodying biblical words and concepts into what they have
determined it means (116). Second, historical revelation incorporates the
whole Christian person—not just the mind. Not only is the formation of
doctrine tangled up in the church’s prayer, piety, and worship (107-8, 115),
doctrine proper is not the extent of the Christian life. Salvation history ensures
that faith is seen as a totality and not merely gnosis. In sum, doctrine is the
terminus of a complex process in which the meaning of the Bible is, as Rainy
puts it, “re-embodied” into the church’s words and thoughts (112, 126).
Rainy seems aware that his position has advertently widened the
traditional Reformed distinction between the absolute authority of the Word of
God and the relative authority of church and its doctrine. It is not his wish,
however, to discredit orthodoxy by making doctrine appear all too human
(118, 125-26, 363). So, he attempts to back-fill the ditch between divine
revelation and church doctrine, significantly, through possibilities inherent in
the salvation history paradigm. For one thing, it enables the believer to
participate in the original facts of revelation (120, 129-30, 151). As he wrote
earlier: “The divine truth is designed to lead us into the understanding of
divine history, in which history it calls us to confess and to claim our own
place. The adoption of any other method seems inconsistent with the nature of
man; possibly it may be inconsistent with the nature of God…” (82-3, also
102). The church does not form doctrine by gazing from afar on the mind of
God or his works. Through the Spirit, it is plunged into salvation history; there
it encounters a revelation which—as it was disclosed in historical acts and
transactions—has already crossed the qualitative gap between the divine mind
and human history (106, 121, 133).
He then appeals to the facts of salvation history to lessen the shock of
having emptied the biblical storehouse of doctrines. Far from consigning the
church to be “haunted by perpetual doubt” of the clarity of revelation, “the
historical structure of the Scripture fits it to afford us a guarantee that we do
correctly catch its drift, and that when we read it we are dealing with teaching
which is indeed ‘in part’ only, yet is firm, definite, and reliable” (156, also
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118, 130, 155). As such, despite all that he has professed about the authentic
humanity of church doctrine, he assures listeners that the distinction between
church doctrine and biblical teaching is mainly a formal distinction in regard
to the fundamental doctrines. Enthusing that Heilsgeschichte could facilitate
ecumenical consensus on essential doctrines, Rainy consciously stands himself
under the shadow of Reformed orthodoxy’s quest for a unified Protestantism
gathered around a coterie of fundamental articles (119-21).57 Cunningham’s
protégé knew that the Reformed irenic was spurned by the punctilious
Lutherans. But could the perspicuous facts of salvation history secure the
consensus on fundamental doctrines that the Reformed orthodox sought in
vain?
Even as Heilsgeschichte dashes the confidence of the older Protestant
dogmatics, it further mitigates the disconcerting ditch between historical
revelation and church doctrine by assuring the church that its doctrine is
invested with the vast wisdom of the catholic mind because it was and is
determined in a fellowship of the ages (118, 137). Protestant orthodoxy was
fully justified to dispute Rome’s equation of the regula fidei with its own
testimony. And Rainy had earlier damned the Vincentian Canon with words as
unflinching as anything Cunningham could have mustered: oppressive
tradition suffocated voices calling for fresh restatements of old doctrines and
cramped faithful minds from realizing new truths from Scripture (7). But the
ahistorical concept of revelation assumed by the old Protestant divines let
them exalt the sufficiency of Scripture by belittling the role of the church in
the determination of the rule of faith (137, 364-65). Salvation history binds the
Christian mind and experience of all ages to the “mighty acts of the Lord”
recorded in Scripture (130). As a result, the catholic mind is a major factor in
the ongoing formation of doctrine. Tradition shapes the present Christian mind
(for good and bad) to such an extent that inherited doctrines could be
outgrown but never fully shed (137-38). Of course, traditional church beliefs
are not infallible, but the present task of re-embodying Scripture should
always be weighed against past results of that same process.
57 For background see Martin Friedrich, Von Marburg bis Leuenberg: die lutherisch-reformierte Gegensatz und seine Überwindung (Waltrop: Spenner, 1999); specifically, Walter Schöpsdau, “Fundamentalartikel,” RGG4 3, 412-4; Muller, PRRD, 1: 406-50.
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As noted previously, Hofmann’s method carried within itself a back-
check: doctrine, unfolded from the individual’s experience of salvation, was
then measured against the church’s experience of the same salvation, and
ultimately against the authoritative record of salvation in Scripture. While
Rainy denies outright—surely in reference to Hofmann—“that human
faculties can construe the developed Christianity…out of the experience”
(132), he offers a similar back-check, distinguished by a more guarded
assessment of the ability of experience to correctly recapitulate the story of
salvation history, whether writ small in the individual’s heart or large on 1800
years of church tradition (132-37, also 123-24).58 Remarkably, the crucial role
accorded experience in Heilsgeschichte allows nothing less than the
rehabilitation of church tradition for Reformed dogmatics.
The second half of the lecture responds to the motley crew of pietists,
romantics, and rationalists who decry doctrine as a malfunction of the
Christian mind and a mistreatment of the Bible.59 The psychology of the
Christian mind in the appropriation of revelation is his lynchpin argument for
why the church simply must have doctrine. All Christians form doctrine,
willingly or not (149, later 250-2, 255). Rainy is prescient of what has become
a visited topic among scholars who investigate the nature of doctrine: by
defining dogma or doctrine via its function as a social demarcation, the
category is broadened to include groups whose non- or even anti-creedal
posture excluded them from previous accounts of the formation and history of
classical dogma or doctrine.60
58 Schleiermacher is standing behind them both. Rainy reproves him for constricting revelation to experience, but admits his defective Glaubenslehre contains a precious truth: “there is a verification of the truth in the life, and a congruity between the two, that moderates the boldness of theory…” (131, also 364). Rainy’s disavowal of Hofmann’s attempt to derive the whole body of orthodoxy from religious experience still assumes the congruity of the two within the continuum of salvation history (129). As such, could he resist measuring doctrine by moral conscience—a process which led to the dilution of much traditional doctrine in the Victorian era and left Calvinism, especially, reeling (see 1.4.5)? See Michael Bartholomew, “The Moral Critique of Victorian Orthodoxy”, in Religion in Victorian Britain, 2: 166-190; H. R. Murphy, “The Ethical Revolt against Christian Orthodoxy in Early Victorian England,” AHR 60 (1955): 800-817; Alan P. F. Sell, “From Worms to Sunbeams: The Dilution of Calvinism in English Congregationalism,” JURCHS 7 (2004): 253-74. 59 See also “MTT,” 86. 60 Recent examples: Ulrich Köpf, “Dogmengeschichte oder Theologeschichte?” KuD 85 (1988): 455-73; Alister E. McGrath, “Dogma und Gemeinde: Zur sozialen Funktion des christlichen Dogmas,” KuD 37 (1991): 24-43.
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Two contentious aspects of the Christian mind loom especially large in
an apologia for doctrine for the nineteenth century context: the nature of
analogy, and the legitimacy of logical inference. In regard to the first, Rainy
does not interact with Newman’s deployment of natural analogy to shore up
the probability of Christianity’s development (see 2.3.3), but rather the
accusation that doctrine can be derived from the Bible only by a philistine
inability to read it for what it is: literature. The cultured Oxonian Matthew
Arnold (1822-1888), in Literature and Dogma (1873), was the most articulate
voice accusing churches of culling doctrine from the pages of Scripture only
by twisting poetry into prose. “All we have is picture-writing,” Rainy
summarized his argument, “we are not intended to presume that the pictures
have prototypes behind them that are of one pattern with them...” (148-9, also
169). But not only does Arnold’s position abandon the Bible as a word from
God in any meaningful sense, it overlooks that Scripture is above all a record
of the facts of salvation history (150-1, 156), even it does occasionally employ
analogy as a descriptive device.61
The facts of salvation history are likewise deployed to damper the
misuse of logical inference in the formation of doctrine (see 1.2.3; 1.4.4)—
what concerns him most of all. Here it becomes explicit that his defence of the
necessity of doctrine, though sincere, is festooned with hesitations about how
the church in the past has adduced and used doctrine (142-3, 157), and is
aligned with an ongoing polemic against the hubris of systematic theology.
The older theologians had been too bold in their use of inference, guilty of
“the frequent exemplification of excess and over confidence, in handling
doctrine” (159). Rainy is timid. As inference is a facet of thought it is a
legitimate aspect of the ecclesial mind’s re-embodiment of revelation so long
61 Insisting upon the historical rather than literary nature of the Bible does not exculpate Rainy from having to deal with the problem of analogy; it only shifts him to the problem of historical analogy. Even if it is somewhat unfair to reprove him for neglecting this topic—what Ernst Troeltsch would later table as a burning issue of religious historiography—his admission that he had no interest whatsoever “to speculate on the nature of knowledge” (155, also 150) in regard to historical analogy is sloppy. Its omission is never rectified, even in pieces where one rightly expects to find involved analysis of historical method, for example: Rainy, “Merle D’Aubigne and his Works as Historian,” Catholic Presbyterian 1 (1879): 101-111. A concise summary of Troeltsch’s important position is his article “Historiography,” in ERE 6, ed. James Hastings (1913; reprint, Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1937), 716-722. Good treatments of his view of analogy, from opposite standpoints, are Van Harvey, The Historian and the Believer (New York, Macmillan, 1966), and C. Stephen Evans, The Historical Christ and the Jesus of Faith (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1996), especially 170-202.
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as it is natural, unfolding harmoniously from the direct message of Scripture.
But what danger lurks at hand! Much of the modern distaste for doctrine stems
from “the prodigality of distinction and inference” whereby theologians,
lusting for a truly systematic depiction of faith, have piece-by-piece erected
doctrinal superstructures that soar far above the life-giving facts of redemption
held in the Bible (145, 161-4). Yet a complete system of doctrine is precisely
what revelation delivered in history cannot offer. “Here incompleteness, i.e.,
the befitting incompleteness which the nature of our knowledge implies, ought
to be deliberately aimed at. But the power of halting at the right point is one of
the rarest powers even of clear-sighted and truthful minds” (373).
Doctrine must stay in pulmonary connection to the saving acts of the
Lord. That an inference may be logically possible from a ‘first doctrine’ does
not make it desirable or permissible (167-8). The further doctrine drifts from
the “intended scope” of Scripture, the more frigid it grows to the believing
heart; the further theology employs inference in pursuit of a system, the
greater is the likelihood to impose itself upon Scripture rather than be imposed
upon by revelation. This is, in fact, what Cunningham’s “undue and exclusive
regard” for the Calvinist ordo salutis did to his reading of the Bible (367-8),
suggests Rainy, finally in open defiance of his teacher. And the further
inference or deduction carries theology from the facts of salvation, the more
the “mixed speech” of churchly proclamation (5) becomes weighted toward
the human accent (158, 170-3). If what is logically inferred is as certain as that
which has been first deduced from the divine truths of Scripture, what portion
of this newly inferred doctrine bears the proliferated spores of human error
(165, 365)? If the manifoldness of God’s creation makes inferential
conclusions in science provisional and apt to be often revised, should not
inference from revealed truth make theologians equally cautious, he asks,
taking aim at the theological Baconianism characteristic of his tradition
(167)?62 But how could a theory of development draw the church’s body of
doctrine back into vital proximity with revelation rather than let it sprawl
further afield?
62 In a similar comment in “MTT,” 90, Rainy sounds like Newman in eschewing “dogmatism” for “probabilism”.
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[3.3.6] Rainy’s audience held a prejudice against the notion that
doctrine develops: past and current theories devalued the Bible and inflated
instead either infallible reason or an infallible church (176-7). In his fifth
lecture (175-233) he pleads for reappraisal. The time is right. Evangelicals are
now cognizant that ‘believing theologians’ in Germany have been assuming
doctrinal development for some time. They are also less inclined to evade the
evidence of doctrinal fluctuation delivered by the impartial historiography
born of the Enlightenment (175, 178, 181-2). Newman too deserves credit.
The decades since the Essay’s publication have seen the idea of doctrinal
development garner acceptance among Protestant theologians, even if, Rainy
reproves, “development” is becoming a sloppy theological catchphrase. Only
Rome still professes to be unruffled by the findings of the new history and to
remain steadfast before the pull of time (178, 182).63
Yet evangelicals still have two things to unlearn. First, revelation as a
“direct delivery” of doctrines (181) must be forsaken. Only when a particular
theory of revelation is confounded with the Protestant position on the
Scriptures can doctrinal development be construed as treasonous to “the faith
once delivered” (180, 378).64 Second, their church historiography will have to
be rewritten (178-9). Replicating a golden age of the church cannot be the
goal, be it the Reformers’ intent to return to the theology of the fathers, the
Tractarian slogan of “Antiquity”, or the Latitudinarian attempt to limit
essential dogmas to the first five centuries, for it bullies the early church into
producing a body of orthodoxy that scholarship shows was not there (374).
Nor should it be the goal. Newman is right. “Adherents of those creeds, who
draw the line there, have to answer the question why just those creeds should
be thought to comprehend all that the Church ever may confess?” (375). The
preceding lectures have placed Rainy in a position where he thinks he can
defend Scripture as the sole and adequate rule of faith and “assert and
vindicate development of doctrine as a function of the Church…belonging to
her duty, connected with a right use of her privileges, and indeed
indispensable to her life” (183).
63 Likely, Rainy has the recent Vatican Council in mind. 64 Perhaps in deference to Cunningham, Rainy reproves instead the Irish clergyman Archer Butler (1814-48) as representative of the short-sighted rejoinders to the Essay that reaffirmed “development” only in a logical rather than historical sense (180-1, 375-9).
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The dilemma is twofold. Current theories of doctrinal development are
stillborn, first of all because each in its own way picks the same wrong starting
point for development, namely, Scripture; second, because they either bloat or
belittle the achievement of the post-apostolic church (183-6). Regarding the
first aspect, Rainy has identified a crucial problem: how can Scripture be a
sufficient rule of faith if it provides only the point of departure for doctrinal
development? His solution is to insist that doctrine should develop not away
from but up to Scripture (226). The “great world of truth” (190)65 held in the
Bible is never fully mapped or explored; church proclamation is the pursuit of
the fulsome truth contained in Scripture. A true theory of development, then,
departs from the sub-apostolic church, the very first instance of the Christian
mind engaging the “deep facts” (201) of God’s saving action in history. In
respect to the second, it is absolutely imperative to gauge accurately the pitch
of early church belief. The Roman and Tractarian apologetic grossly
overestimates the achievements of the early church, consequently finding no
space for a genuine development of doctrine (186, 196). Current historical
criticism is making clear that the early church was less than orthodox. In the
earliest centuries, several fundamental beliefs were only partially expressed by
the early fathers; some doctrines later considered essential are conspicuously
absent; the human proclivity to sluggishness of spirit made the church soon
rest at what had already been doctrinally achieved rather than forge ahead into
the depths of revelation (191, 193, 197).
Baur and other radical critics, however, underestimate the early
Christians as babes in the faith. Assured by Hofmann’s work on the canon that
the substance of the canonical New Testament was widely circulated at a very
early date (188), Rainy maintains the early church had the same “thorough
acquaintance with the history of the great facts of divine revelation” that the
church had after the crystallization of the canon (189), as well as a strong and
joyful hold of the facts and their doctrinal implications, even if they could not
yet do full justice to it (191-2). The early church was akin to a new convert,
Bible in hand and heart afire, in possession of the full truth but not yet of the
fullness of that truth (186-6). The doctrinal attainment of the early church as a
65 Compare the expression to Newman, Essay, 27.
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real though diminished reflection of the light of revelation must be considered
the point of exit for the development of doctrine (185, 195, 198-9).66
Rainy lacked Newman’s nerve. He timorously abstained from
sustained attention to actual examples of the development of doctrine, leaving
his treatment of development largely theoretical where Newman’s notes are
bedighted with messy detail.67 Still, his cursory examples of the history of
Christology, the sacraments, and justification, explicate his understanding of
the mechanisms of development. It is typically “slow and secular” (220, 183),
the interplay of present historical context with tradition and recourse to
Scripture. But doctrine has also developed in the heat of controversy, in which
the church had to expose outside malignant cultural and religious impulses;
“and in doing so, she became more fully aware of the proper genius and
bearing of her own” (211).68 False teaching within the church “cross-
questioned” the status quo of belief, provoking open reflection as well as
resistance to new truth (215).69
Significant, too, has been the influence of various methods on
theological reflection. Scholasticism, in particular, by insisting upon
systematic and logical corroboration, has developed doctrine by sheer
proliferation (214, 382-3). Rainy deems the church’s historical life as a “cross-
questioning” at the hands of Providence, to which it has responded either with
a deepened understanding of scriptural revelation or falsely, by defective
development, or by preferring the familiar to the rough prodding of divine
truth. Given the church’s natural indolence, the latter has regrettably occurred
66 Lauding the early church’s posture to Scripture as exemplary, Rainy argues against Rome and Oxford that the rule of faith in the early church originally intended to underscore the dependence of church teaching upon Scripture, even if the rule “too readily lent itself to serve the purposes of ecclesiastical parties—to embody the arrogance of majorities, or to sustain by an evil conservatism every abuse which became habitual” (207, also 217, 379-80, 383-6). In the earliest centuries, something akin to a coincidence theory of tradition and Scripture was held (see 1.2.2) and was likely even “factually true”, i.e., what the early church taught generally coincided with the apostolic teaching in the New Testament writings. The problem was that it was not “theologically true”. The early church overestimated the scope and depth of its grasp of the facts of salvation, which worked to castigate as innovations doctrines that sought to develop or deepen the church’s understanding of revelation. 67 His final work, The Ancient Catholic Church (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1902), tracks in more detail the development of early church doctrines, although without theoretical discussion. 68 Benjamin B. Warfield, in his review of the above work (PRR 13 [1902]: 662-64), complained that Rainy depicted the doctrine of paedobaptism as a development spurred on largely by the need to counter false teaching. 69 Compare to “MTT,” 79.
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all too often, especially as the early church began to impose itself onto the
Bible under the guise of tradition (220). Indeed, Augustine’s sombre
amillennialism flavours this lecture. The development of doctrine is entwined
in the historical unfolding of the cities of God and of man. Like the church
itself, doctrine is ever an admixture of sheep and goats, and even the best and
purest churches are not free of error (218, 221-22). Further, Rainy considers
the church’s “fallenness” as a major obstacle to the healthy development of
doctrine. Not only does church doctrine frequently stray onto wayward paths,
the church’s spiritual sloth and its leaders’ addiction to power leaves it
indurate to the leading of the Spirit to ponder anew the great events of that
“blessed history of redemption” (201).
Church tradition presses Rainy’s argument as an ambivalent weight.
The organic nature of the church entails that the doctrinal tradition is, for good
or bad, “a communicable attribute”, handed down to successive generations
(224, 216, 225-6, 378). Generations vary in the degree of attention they pay to
specific aspects of that heritage, and various groups or parties may contest or
correct, endow with new meaning, or positively develop aspects of that
doctrinal heritage. Still, “something is gained which the mind does not, nay,
which it cannot again abjure” (216-7). A Protestant catholicity behoves each
generation to consciously appropriate orthodoxy as the yield of earlier
labourers in the task of determining revelation. A Protestant catholicity does
not chain church proclamation to the past.70 Each generation must critically
receive the orthodox tradition as it listens to the voice of the living God
speaking in Scripture (225, 231). In this sense, then, Rainy assesses the
Reformation as a complex religious phenomenon. It was not only a regress
back to the Scriptures and beliefs of the early church and, negatively, the
eradication of medieval doctrinal corruptions and spiritual superstitions; it also
attained an unparalleled—in many ways still unsurpassed—advance into
Scripture.71 Yet, it too was shaped by what it was bequeathed, and as happens
with all of God’s gifts, it variously mismanaged the blessings it handed on to
posterity (221-2).
70 Note: the language of “Protestant Catholicity” is mine, not Rainy’s. 71 Despite patristic and medieval precursors, the Protestant doctrine of justification by faith, Rainy avers, was fundamentally unprecedented, and a real achievement of the Reformers (386).
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An unresolved tension at lecture’s end is between the open process of
development and the finality of a developed doctrine. The former, which
Rainy wagers to risk a real errand in the wilderness (221-22),72 renders
provisional each and every doctrine determined by the Christian mind. Even
the classic catholic dogmas of the early church are not beyond correction,
improvement, or supplementation (223-26, 232). True to form, however, he
recoils from radical conclusions: past decisions of the church on fundamental
doctrines like Christ, Trinity, grace and free will, while not, strictly speaking,
final for Protestants, were handled with such dexterity and precision that
material alteration is not really conceivable (224-25). Just how consistent is
his mediating position? This question sits uncomfortably in the closing lecture,
a programmatic piece which, given the future ecclesiastical status of its
speaker, was pregnant with repercussions for the future of his theological and
ecclesiastical tradition.
[3.3.7] The final lecture (235-90) on the function and form of creeds
finally makes explicit the practical consequences for the church of what had
been handled theoretically until now. Rainy delivered these lectures as he was
hitting stride as a front-rank FC leader, and it is hard not to read them,
especially the sixth, as plotting an advance course through a challenge
looming for confessional churches like the Presbyterians: creedal revision. His
repeated insistence on the necessity of a written confession (248-9, 250-1,
255); his plaintive awareness of the mocking irony of church history, where
creeds and confessions, against their modus operandi, have so often
heightened antagonism and ossified division (234-43); his wish to find the
ideally slow and steady development of doctrine reflected in a reverent and
cautious practice of creedal revision (242, 275), bespeak an ecclesiastical
leader desirous of a thoroughly “conservative arrangement” (277) between his
tradition’s extensive body of doctrine and the possibility that parts of that
corpus no longer resonated with church conscience. Rumblings of discontent
had been heard in Scotland, at least, for some time. Under the guidance of
John Cairns and James Orr, the UPs would pass a declaratory act on the
72 See also “MTT,” 82.
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Westminster Confession in 1879; calls to revise the Confession began coming
before the FC Assembly in the 1880s.73 To his credit, DDCD shows that Rainy
was seeing well beyond the older question then taxing contemporaries,
namely, which church office bearers need subscribe to the Confession (248-9,
254, 274, 393-9), to the profounder issues of the very nature and necessity of
church creeds and confessions.
A creed functions to express that portion of doctrines a church
considers fundamental. For Rainy, “fundamental articles” of faith
(approximating what other church traditions designate as dogma) connotes
those doctrines deemed to be so integral to the church’s life and mission that
to deny them would be to subvert the church and rupture the body of Christ
(260). What had been broached in his fourth lecture in the context of the
chance offered by the perspicuous events of salvation history to break the
post-Reformation impasse over the discernment of core Christian doctrines is
now revisited in force (260, 262-3, 281).74 Considering examples like the
Nicene Creed and Augsburg Confession, Rainy argues that creeds historically
executed a dual function—anticipated in the New Testament—of confessing
fundamental beliefs as a public witness to the world without and to reprove
false teaching within (242, 245, 248, 256-8). As such, a creed is the church’s
response to the question arising from both within and without: what do you
hold most fundamental about the revelation you claim to have received from
God? What beliefs bind God’s people together in the unity of truth? The logic
of Heilsgeschichte further affects the function of a creed by helping the church
“utter the present faith so as to bring out the consent of past ages with our
own” (272). For there must be, he insists in a manner not unlike Newman’s
second test of doctrinal continuity, a durable identity to the church’s core
doctrines, a stable cluster of fundamentals, which any new creed or confession
73 The literature concerning Presbyterian creedal revision in America and the British Empire in the late nineteenth and early twentieth-centuries is considerable, including: Don S. Fortson, III, “New School Calvinism and the Presbyterian Creed,” JPH 82 (2004): 221-243; Bradley J. Longfield, The Presbyterian Controversy: Fundamentalists, Modernists, and Moderates (New York: Oxford UP, 1991); William Klempa, “Canadian Presbyterianism and the Westminster Standards,” Papers of the Canadian Society of Presbyterian History 23 (1998): 38-51; Robert Swanton, “The Westminster Confession and the Declaratory Statements,” RTR 44 (1985): 13-19; Peter Matheson, “Transforming the Creed,” in Scottish Christianity in the Modern World, ed. Stewart J. Brown (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 2000), 119-31; Findlay Holmes, The Presbyterian Church in Ireland (Dublin: Columba P, 2000), 123-133. 74 See also “MTT,” 90; Simpson, 2: 83-84, citing his 1887 address as moderator.
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must retain unless it deigns to deny the organic continuity of the church in
history or cast aspersion upon the clarity of the facts of salvation (273, 276).
At the same time, he vehemently maintains that the church has no right
to speak except from present conviction (271, 279). The intrinsic stability of
the church’s core faith must not petrify the form of a creed. A Protestant
church should neither permit creeds to bar the pathways opened by divine
revelation nor protect them from the attrition of doctrinal development (254).
There was no lack of modern detractors to remind Rainy that, practically,
Protestants confessions often function in a manner indistinguishable from
Roman dogma, enticing the Christian to a habit of deference to the human
document and the consent it purports to express, and leave them awed before
the hoary wisdom that invests it (255).75 This is illegitimate, he contends. Like
their component parts, doctrine, creeds are human, and to treat them as
inviolable is to make an “idle flourish” of the Protestant claim that the Word
of God stands over the church (274-5). Every branch of the church has a right
and duty to hold its creeds subject to correction, “for as the inspired teaching
is before the Church, so the Church is before the confession…” (274, also
397).
If the church must not flinch from this charge, it should also not move
hastily against fundamental doctrines. The perspicuity of the saving acts of
God recorded in the Bible, as well as the organic-historical nature of the
church, ensure that Christian fundamentals are stable. Consequently, the living
voice of the church will utter substantially the same “credo” as past
generations. Rainy can even speak of the fundamentals as a “permanent
acquisition” and “fixed possession” (270, 273). In fact, two strata exist in any
given confession of faith: fundamental doctrines that aim for a catholic
presentation of the Christian faith, and peripheral doctrines, bound to the
questions and issues of a specific time and place. The latter, because they tend
to stray further from the central determinations of salvation history, are more
liable to error or redundancy, and therefore to abridgement, correction, or
elimination as the church’s mind develops (262-3, 272-5). The former are
really susceptible only to deeper penetration. For this reason, a great creed like
75 See also “MTT,” 87.
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the Scots Confession can confidently proclaim the faith whilst admitting the
possibility of correction (397-8). Given that creedal revision is a reflex of the
church’s ongoing determination of the facts of salvation held in the Bible, the
manner of revision should bear the same traits as the ideal of development. It
will incrementally and cautiously aim to scale down a confession to focus
more sharply on the centre of faith rather than swell it with littoral doctrines; it
aspires for catholicity, the fundamental beliefs that unite across time and
place, rather than to retrench sectarian tendencies or time-bound peculiarities
(279, 399).76 And this task now confronts the church, Rainy declares. God
intends to bring Presbyterianism back to the living Word to let its doctrine be
affirmed, or pared down and simplified (371-3).
Rainy’s position on creeds has a common lineage in nineteenth-century
theology. An effect of neo-Lutheranism’s mutual debt to the evangelical
awakening and Schleiermacher was its insistence that doctrine expresses the
church’s living faith. Werner Elert (1885-1954), an esteemed later
representative of the Erlangen school, wrote concerning dogma: “According to
Protestant understanding, they are not decretals of faith but confessions of
faith. They do not say what should be believed but rather what is believed.”77
At the same time, the movement’s debt to the romantic Leitmotif of the
organic nature of historical reality gave the ‘churchliness’ of doctrine a
conservative embodiment; indeed, for most neo-Lutherans, the Book of
Concord was a definitive description of faith’s consciousness of salvation.78
Similarly, Rainy believed creeds should speak out those doctrines that the
present church considers central. The Christian mind of each and every age,
after all, must re-embody the great facts of salvation for its own. Yet the
constant revision of a creed according the whims of the age is far removed
from his wholly conservative intent, as if fundamental doctrines were to be
determined each generation by polling church members’ beliefs. As with
Hofmann, the Tatsache of salvation history ensured that for Rainy, doctrine
and creeds are never merely descriptive of the church’s faith. The delivery of 76 See also his critical remarks on the Heidegger-penned Formula Consensus Helvetica of 1675 (284-5, 402-6). 77 Cited in Bienert, Dogmengeschichte, 16-7. Emphasis is Elert’s. 78 On the links between ideological conservatism and organic thinking see Hayden White, Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1973), 15-6, 25-9.
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doctrine as historical revelation guarantees that a confession of faith is an
inextinguishable aspect of Christian faith, the fundamental doctrines that it
proclaims can be determined with confidence, and the essential continuity of
“the church’s familiar faith” (226) in history is assured.
Ultimately, the crucial difference between a German Lutheran like
Hofmann and a Scottish Presbyterian like Rainy on the subject of creeds was
practical: the latter had the ecclesiastical and legal freedom to let the present
tense of the church’s faith actually alter its past voice. And how Rainy’s
contention that a confession is the church’s offspring and not its sire agitated
the FC during the latter years of the Victorian era! It expressed in a nutshell
what was startling for evangelical Presbyterians about his understanding of
doctrine in relation to revelation and history: doctrine, and thus also creeds, is
the utterance of faith, not of revelation. It also raised a thorny legal problem
with large ecclesiological ramifications. Could a church alter its doctrinal
standards to reflect the development of its doctrines, as the FC did through its
1892 Declaratory Act and 1900 Act of Union with the UPs, and still be the
same church?79 The House of Lords did not think so in 1904 when they
awarded all FC deeds, trusts, and property to the minority who dissented from
UFC church union.
3.4. Conclusion A work of DDCD’s magnitude is not easily assessed. It touches at
some point upon every aspect of doctrine. Admittedly, this inevitably entails
often-superficial overviews of issues. Yet this was attributable not only to the
hasty preparation of the lectures (34) but to the churchman who hurried at
times to the practical repercussions rather than linger in thought. Moreover,
the knotty prose and sometime convoluted organization confirm the quip heard
then in FC circles: “Dr. Rainy was misty as well as Rainy.” (It was this, in
combination with his cautious poise, which gave him a reputation for
craftiness and opportunism).
79 See the excellent study by K. R. Ross, Church and Creed in Scotland. The Free Church Case 1900-1904 and its Origins (Edinburgh: Rutherford House, 1988); G. N. M. Collins, The Heritage of Our Fathers (Edinburgh: The Knox P, 1976), 64-119; “United Free Church Act anent Spiritual Independence of the Church, 1906,” Corpus Confessionum 18 (Berlin and Leipzig: de Gruyter, 1937), 811-3.
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Notwithstanding, DDCD is an impressive treatment of the nature of
doctrine that is rife with stimulating observations, some of which will
percolate in the next two chapters, and some of which, especially the congruity
of aspects of his proposal with so-called linguistic or hermeneutical
interpretations of the nature of doctrine current nowadays, will be revisited in
the conclusion of the dissertation. That DDCD is also a controversial agenda
for the future viability of the evangelical and Reformed tradition makes it
worthy of attention not only from theologians but also church historians. It
could only have been written on the “darkling plain” of uncertain times, where
the stalwart beliefs of Christianity were being battered, old certainties
toppling, and the church’s weapons at hand seemed blunted with age. It takes
a great leader to neither retrench nor capitulate. DDCD makes explicit that
while Rainy heard the “melancholy, long, withdrawing roar” of the “Sea of
Faith”,80 and sought to respond to those voices inside and outside the church
who protested that classical church doctrine was keeping Christ from them
rather than bringing them closer (142-43), he refused to allow the church’s
historic confession to ebb. To accomplish this task, he adopted a thoroughly
historical approach to revelation, church, and doctrine, despite the fact it was
still widely suspected within his evangelical and Reformed tradition, and
leaned hard upon Newman and Hofmann, each of whom had already tried in
his own way to combine a conservative theological agenda with the century’s
new historical consciousness.
Three topics in particular are worth revisiting at the conclusion of this
chapter to examine further Rainy’s contribution to the problem of history and
doctrine within the contours of this dissertation: the web of issues related to
doctrine and salvation history, his lack of a theory of development proper, and
his quest for the fundamental doctrines of Christianity.
An evaluation of Rainy’s contribution to his tradition’s negotiation of
its doctrines with the rights of history during the nineteenth century must focus
upon his specific contribution: Heilsgeschichte. The temptation to be avoided
is to either reduce his version to its parts or to read it anachronistically.
80 Arnold, “Dover Beach,” http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/arnold/writings/doverbeach.html; “MTT,” 88.
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Salvation history à la Rainy is composite, and at no point does he appear
slavish to his obvious influences: Cunningham, Newman—whose Essay
affected him suggestively rather than substantially, exposing the ahistoricism
of evangelical views of church doctrine and tradition but not providing a
satisfactory alternative—nor even Hofmann. Colin Brown’s judgement of
Hofmann rebounds upon Rainy: “His work appealed to a public that wanted to
be evangelical, Christ-centred, and broadly biblical, but that was content to
leave largely to one side the historical questions that engrossed the nineteenth-
century biblical critics and the philosophical questions with which
Schleiermacher, Feuerbach, and Kierkegaard wrestled.”81 Rainy was in the
nadir of a Protestantism not yet embarrassed to profess a plenary inspiration of
the Bible as the concomitant of divine revelation. As with Hofmann, he had no
need to posit a distinction between Historie and Geschichte to cover the
discrepancies between historical or theological reconstructions of Israel’s
history because for him there were really none to speak of. The ‘God who
acts’ movement of the mid-twentieth century which popularized the idea of
salvation history was criticised (among other things) for creating a canon
within the canon, marginalizing the vast sections of Scripture that are not
historical narrative.82 For Rainy, however, revelation was foremost but not
exclusively the mighty deeds and words of the Lord—it encompassed also the
experience, ritual embodiment, and propositional interpretation of these acts
within the inspired Word of God.83
A Heilsgeschichte paradigm provided Rainy, as an evangelical and
disciple of the Reformed tradition, with an antidote to the “disease of
ahistoricism”—his tradition’s hereditary ailment—of which he had been made
81 Brown, Jesus, 248. 82 Summarized from Brevard S. Childs, Biblical Theology in Crisis (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1970), 9-87. 83 Perhaps Rainy’s combination of revelation-as-history and a doctrine of plenary inspiration was enabled by his New College colleague James Bannerman’s widely read Inspiration: The Infallible Truth and Divine Authority of the Holy Scriptures (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1865). In addition to distinguishing between revelation and inspiration—a distinction not prominent in older Reformed theology—Bannerman admitted the Bible itself provides no theory of inspiration beyond asserting the fact of it, even though he still defended a theory of verbal inspiration. See further (though tendentiously) Nicholas Needham, The Doctrine of Holy Scripture in the Free Church Fathers (Edinburgh: Rutherford House, 1991).
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poignantly aware by Newman’s stultifying critique of Bible Christianity.84 It
broke open the classic status quaestionis concerning revelation, doctrine, and
tradition without conceding the integrity of the Protestant position. Moreover,
the continuum of salvation history—what Hofmann called the Tatsache—that
linked all ages of the church to God’s acts in history and their original
impression recovered the significance of church tradition for the formation of
doctrine as fact and ressourcement.85 The long birth of orthodoxy is duly
acknowledged, as is the church’s maternal role in passing on the faith. Rainy
called evangelical Presbyterians to consciously engage church tradition as its
inheritance and as a resource for the present determination of Scripture. Yet,
even when understood as a record of salvation history, the Bible retained all
the perfection and authority it was invested with by Protestant orthodoxy and
contemporary evangelicalism. Indeed, because he rejected the approach of
Schleiermacher and Hofmann of deducing doctrine first from the religious
consciousness, Rainy’s position even harmonizes with the Confession’s
statement that all that humankind needs to know of God and his ways is
expressed in Scripture or “by good and necessary consequence” (I.6) may be
deduced from it. In fact, he considers his own (vague) imperative to let the
natural scope of Scripture itself sharply delimit doctrinal inference to finally
be able to implement the Reformed orthodox maxim of consequentiae
proximae, necessariae evidentes (164).
Rainy’s endorsement of salvation history also promised to ratchet the
tension between a doctrine’s normativity for church confession and its
historical relativity, which confessional Protestant churches had let snap, with
the result that their confessions of faith had taken on an aura of permanence.86
Rainy—as with most proponents of Heilsgeschichte in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries87—dethroned systematic theology as the queen of the
84 The phrase is from Bernard Ramm, The Evangelical Heritage: A Study in Historical Theology (1973; reprint, Grand Rapids: Baker, 2000), 15-16. Rainy’s role in opening the FC to “believing criticism” of the Bible is related, of course. See especially Richard Riesen, Criticism and Faith in Late Victorian Scotland (Lanham, MD: UP of America, 1988). 85 Kenneth Stewart, “Evangelicals and Patristic Christianity: 1517 to the Present,” EQ 80 (2008): 307-21, has shown the suprising extent to which evangelicals have engaged patristic literature. But proof-texting the church fathers is not the same as being conscious of the weight of patristic tradition on their own theological thinking. 86 Gustav Krüger, Was heißt und zu welchem Ende studiert man Dogmengeschichte? (Freiburg: Mohr, 1895), 17-18. 87 On the varieties see Mildenberger, “Heilsgeschichte,” 1574-5.
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sciences. Church doctrine necessarily shares in this humbling. His emphasis
on revelation as history thwarts the “syllogistic manipulation” (379) of
Scripture that has spawned such vast and unwieldy systems of doctrine, and
calls the church back to the facts of redemptive history to let its doctrinal
achievements be reaffirmed, revised, or rejected. A preference for the
description of Christian faith through a combination of biblical exegesis and
historical theology is an unmistakable trait of the diffusive influence of that
father of modern theology, Schleiermacher. At the same, despite his acerbity
toward the systematizing tendencies of traditional theology, Rainy’s ‘turn to
history’ was motivated above all to protect the same orthodoxy. He refused to
budge from a full-fledged affirmation of the necessity of doctrine, its
importance for the life and mission of the church, its authority under Scripture
for belief, and even the essential stability of orthodoxy. As we shall see
shortly, it was features within the paradigm of salvation history that secured
the latter, namely, the perspicuity of historical revelation, and the organic-
historical nature of the church.
In the same year that Rainy delivered the Cunningham Lectures, the
Presbyterian Alliance sponsored a plenary session on the theme of
development during its general assembly in New York City. After papers on
the subject by stalwarts like John Williamson Nevin and James McCosh,
Charles Hodge rose in the question period to address one of the speakers: “I
rise simply to ask Dr. Brown one question. I want him to tell us what
development is. That has not been done… This is a vital question, sir. We
cannot stand here and hear men talk about development, without telling us
what development is.”88 The curmudgeonly Hodge’s point was incisive. Alan
Sell has remarked that over the course of the Victorian era evolution became
less a theory than a theme—of dubious omnipresence.89 Like Hodge, Rainy
expressed frustration in DDCD at the current sloganeering of “development”
in theology (178-9, 181). Notably, he also resisted conflating the development
of the species with the development of doctrine. The lack of reference to
88 “Discussion on Darwinism and the Doctrine of Development,” in History, Essays, Orations, and Other Documents of the Sixth General Conference of the Evangelical Alliance, 318. 89 Sell, Theology in Turmoil, 71.
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scientific theories of evolution in DDCD is surprising; one year later,
however, he devoted his inaugural lecture as principal of New College to the
topic. What is remarkable about his address is not its unconcern with evolution
as scientific theory—the fact of the assimilation of evolutionary theory among
nineteenth-century evangelicals being a casualty of later theological wars90—
but rather his insistence that evolution or development was variously operative
in the world God governs, specific to the integrity of each sphere of creation.91
Understanding evolutionary processes could shed valuable light on where and
how environment has given impulse to the church’s determination on the facts
of salvation; it could sort out what a doctrine might owe to the Greeks or the
Jews; it could help retrace the long march of the church’s collective mind
toward a doctrinal definition. But deleterious effects follow when pseudo-
scientific theories of evolution bracket God from history or, conversely, make
him so immanent as to be indistinguishable from natural processes. Then,
doctrine becomes only a by-product of environment, and development is
reduced to natural operations of cause and effect or natural selection.92
Second, Rainy maintained a cool distance to philosophical theories of
development. Of course, he was not immune to the philosophical currents
swirling about him: DDCD clearly partakes of the fascination with historical
movement, change, and process typical of his age, and asserts the participation
of the believer in the history of salvation (110, 120)—with all that entailed for
doctrine—by appropriating some generic aspects of an idealistic philosophy of
history. But protest had been raised early in his career against the imposition
of theories of development upon the historical record.93 Newman’s clever use
of antecedents was as guilty of this as were the idealist-soaked
Dogmengeschichten that streamlined the history of doctrine as the logical (and
predictable) unfolding of the divine mind indwelling the church. Rainy’s
historian’s sensibilities left him impervious to proscribing development
90 See David N. Livingstone, Darwin’s Forgotten Defenders: The Encounter between Evangelical Theology and Evolutionary Thought (Edinburgh: Scottish Academic P, 1987); James R. Moore, The Post Darwinian Controversies: A Study of the Protestant Struggle to Comes to Terms with Darwin in Britain and America (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1979). 91 Rainy, Evolution and Theology: Inaugural Address delivered in the New College, Edinburgh, at the Opening of the Session 1874-75 (Edinburgh: MacLaren and Macnivan, 1874), 6-7. 92 Evolution and Theology, 17-21; see also “MTT,” 96. 93 Rainy, “Apologia pro vita sua,” especially 100-2; “Introductory Lecture,” 16-8.
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according to a purported order (215). Further, his resistance to the
interpretation of the development of dogma famously propounded by Baur is
implicit in some of the practical misgivings in DDCD about development. A
dialectical theory of doctrine’s origins and progress sanctifies the violent
opposition of ideas, political mongering by ecclesiastical parties, and the
necessity of error in the realization of the divine Mind in history. This is
precisely what the churchman, consensus builder, pragmatist cannot stomach,
even if the historian knew that some doctrines have indeed developed in this
way. Indeed, a host of comments in DDCD give rise to the nagging suspicion
that Rainy was not always keeping the distinction in mind of how doctrine
actually developed and creeds were formed and how it should have happened
(136, 183, 191, 202, 211, 218, 221, 239, 243, 277-9).
Yet Rainy’s resistance is all the more notable for the fact that
dialectical development was not the only option at hand.94 Conservative
histories of dogma were plentiful in mid-nineteenth century German theology,
including specimens from Neander as well as the mediating and neo-Lutheran
camps. Differences aside, the conservative spectrum typically shared idealist
presuppositions that dictated a gradual organic development of doctrine in
which the contents of revelation came to consciousness in the church’s mind
over the course of church history in a divinely ordained order that looked
strikingly like the classic loci of systematic theology (see 1.3.3; 1.4.5). A
number of historical theologians have observed that the Erlangen school drew
upon Schelling’s less violently dialectical philosophy rather than Hegel’s.95 In
contrast to his UP peer, James Orr (see chapter 5), Rainy appeared unaffected
by these contributions, as well as by the affiliated trend of making a “central
dogma” or fundamental principle the centrifugal point of a given tradition’s
doctrine or institutional ethos.96 He references on occasion Schweizer’s now
classic Die protestantischen Centraldogmen (1854-6), for example, but
appears unperturbed by its thrust. Like Augustine, he argues that Providence is
94 Chapter five will glance at some conservative German Lutherans who also employed Hegel’s philosophy to serve their accounts of the development of dogma. 95 E.g. Beyschlag, Die Erlanger Theologie, 55. 96 For background see Günter Meckenstock, “Protestantismustheorien in Deutschen Idealismus,” in Das protestantische Prinzip: Historische und systematische Studien zum Protestantismusbegriff, ed. Arnulf von Scheliha und Markus Schroeder (Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 1998), 39-54.
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ultimately inscrutable on this side of the eschaton. The hand that orchestrates
the development of church and doctrine through the “cross-questioning” of
history remains hidden in the counsel of God, capable of being traced but not
predicted (215, 232-3, 287).97
Can Rainy’s professedly “from below” account of the delivery and
development of doctrine match the confidence of those histories of dogma that
imposed an external theory of development or a guarantor like a pope, or
merely mimic it?98 His loud insistence throughout DDCD (and elsewhere)
that the recognition of the historicity of revelation and church need not rattle
the church from a confident confession of who God is and what he has done
for our salvation suggests that he himself, at some level, was bothered by it.
His commitment to pursue this topic with his feet firmly on the ground of
historical fact and experience (29) rather than with his head in the clouds
plunged him into the turbulence of historical reality. In the absence of a theory
of development, the complex and considerable question of the origin and
progress of doctrine will have to be accounted for via rigorous historical
phenomenology. This brings at last the issue of the articuli fundemantales,
which I believe lay at the very heart of Rainy’s treatise and its vision for the
future of doctrine in the Reformed tradition.
Given Rainy’s avowal of the church’s doctrinal heritage as a
communicable attribute, it is fitting that considerable traces of seventeenth-
century scholastic Protestant theology mark DDCD. In some sense he did
indeed remain Cunningham’s scion. Nowhere is this more apparent than in his
concerted attention to the topic of the fundamental articles of faith—what
Reformed orthodox theologians had sought in order to establish a unifying
doctrinal centre for a fragmented evangelical Christendom. Their irenics
aimed first for a single confession of faith for the regional Reformed churches,
then a statement of belief agreeable to the Lutherans. Perhaps the most
important example—at least the work that drew the most retaliatory fire—was
the Leiden professor Franciscus Junius’ Eirenicum de pace ecclesiae
catholicae (1593). The bristling Lutheran response conceded agreement only
97 See also Introductory Lecture, 18-22. 98 “From below” is his often used expression: DDCD, 34, 75, 81, 89; “MTT,” 86.
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on the fundamentum organicum seu ministeriale, Scripture, not the
fundamentum dogmaticum seu doctrinale. Nor would doctrinal unanimity be
forthcoming when the fundamentals were ultimately made equivalent to the
full extent of the Lutheran confessions. Rainy, the consummate churchman,
thought the turn to history could renew the possibility of ecumenical
consensus, thereby reviving the possibility that the one, holy, catholic, church
was not merely an invisible reality, at least not among pugilistic Presbyterians.
What advantage lay at his hand that his forebears lacked? Zacharius
Ursinus (1534-83), co-author of the Heidelberg Catechism, had proposed a
synod for Protestant unity in 1581 on terms that included recognition of
Scripture as supreme judge. “For him, Holy Scripture is directly equated with
the truth,” elaborates Wilhelm Neuser. “A doctrine that stands expressly in
Scripture or necessarily follows from it is orthodox; if the opposite is the case,
it is rejected. What is not proven from Scripture but does not contradict it is
nonessential for faith.”99 Such a principle failed to secure doctrinal unanimity
among Protestants, despite agreement on the fundamentum organicum seu
ministeriale, the perspicuity of the doctrinal system contained therein, and the
legitimacy of inferential reasoning from it. Rainy’s bold proposal is that the
articuli fundemantales can be attained only through history. Scripture
confronts the church with the clear and definite facts of God’s saving acts in
history; the palatial structures of doctrine that the older theologians believed to
be domiciled in the Bible, along with the sprawling additions fastened on by
logical deduction, are left without a sure foundation. The facts of salvation
history are so potent and perspicuous that the determination of their meaning
by the church in history attains a stable consensus on fundamental doctrines.
A historical itinerary of fundamental doctrines is now expected, nay
required, by the course of the argument. But Rainy falls silent. He offers no
list, apart from a few vague references to the doctrine of God, Christ, and
salvation, as fundamentals or inerasable achievements of classical orthodoxy.
Having displayed an historian’s not unwarranted disregard for “top-down”
approaches to the history of theology, it is understandable that he would not
presume the core Christian doctrines. Establishing the “fundamentals”, a
99 Neuser, “Die abschließende reformierte Bekenntnisbildung,” in HDThG 2, 350.
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‘mere Christianity’, or a “Nicene faith” is, after all, more difficult than
theologians typically suppose.100 But to neglect a phenomenological
reconstruction of fundamental doctrine from the record of church history
leaves unfulfilled his attempt to reckon with doctrine “from below”, i.e., what
the church throughout history has really determined of revelation, and,
ultimately, renders his proposal as much a paper theory as the Tractarian via
media.
This is not an abstract grievance. The FC’s 1892 Declaratory Act on
the Westminster Confession, a piece of legislation widely considered as
vintage Rainy, intended continuity with traditional Reformed theology by its
very nature as a declaratory act rather than a new confession; yet, recognizing
“diversity of opinion in this Church on such points in the confession as do not
enter into the substance of the Reformed Faith” still permitted whosoever
wanted to narrow the gap between the theological understanding of the
seventeenth and nineteenth centuries.101 As the act’s many critics pointed out,
the key phrase—“substance of the Reformed Faith”—was left undefined.102 It
must be said that Rainy reneged on the promise of a truly historical delivery of
doctrine, and it is difficult to ascertain if his confidence in history to secure
such fundamentals failed, or if his confidence was so great that he was sure he
did not have make the obvious explicit.
Rainy’s effort to historically validate and determine the form and
function of church doctrine, exemplified both in his publications and in his
ecclesiastical legislation and leadership, is perhaps best understood as an
100 Argued to disconcerting conclusions by Euan Cameron, Interpreting Christian History: The Challenge of the Churches’ Past (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005). 101 “Declaratory Act of the General Assembly of the Free Church, 1892.– Anent the Confession of Faith,” in Corpus Confessionum 18, 802-04. During the raucous debate leading up to the passing of the Declaratory Act, Rainy argued that the substance of the Reformed faith could be deduced from the body of Reformed confessional documents, but neglected to specify what would be included therein. See “Overture Anent Declaratory Act,” in Proceedings and Debates of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland, 1892 (Edinburgh: Ballantyre, Hanson & Co., 1892), 145-79. 102 See Ross, Church and Creed in Scotland, 288-9. A protesting rump broke away in 1893 to form the Free Presbyterian Church. See the fine study by James Lachlan MacLeod, The Second Disruption: The Free Church in Victorian Scotland and the Origins of the Free Presbyterian Church (East Linton: Tuckwell, 2000), especially 179-232; idem, “Revision of the Westminster Confession of Faith and the Free Church of Scotland’s Declaratory Act of 1892,” in The Westminster Confession into the 21st Century, ed. J. Ligon Duncan (Fearn: Christian Focus, 2003), 343-366.
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interrupted legacy of seventeenth-century federal theology. This conclusion
might seem strained, given that this analysis of DDCD has excavated the
foundations of his proposal above all in conservative Lutheranism. Except that
Hofmann’s thought, as many have pointed out, itself points back to federal
theology via pietism. Previously, some scholars toyed with the possibility that
Hofmann directly absorbed federal theology from the “awakened” Reformed
pastor in Erlangen, Christian Krafft, who had converted a number of future
neo-Lutherans, including Hofmann. There is, however, no concrete proof.
Regardless, his Heilsgeschichte theology is unthinkable apart from the ground
laid by federal theology. As Eberhard Busch has observed: “Federal Theology
oriented its attention…not to the elevation and maintenance of theological
truths, valid in and of themselves and ascertained as a system of abstract
doctrine, but rather to the realization that those truths occurred (and were
occurring) on the horizon of human reality.”103 The historicizing of revelation,
church, and doctrine propounded by Rainy lies within the trajectory of the
federalists’ abiding concern with divine accommodation in history and the
Bible as a progressive record of the covenantal history of God with
humankind. Despite its dissimilarity on many points with the work of his
teacher Cunningham and the majority of evangelical and Reformed peers,
Rainy’s recasting of doctrine within the bounds of Heilsgeschichte was of
Reformed lineage, even if it represents—like the federalists themselves did—a
‘minority report’ in the tradition. And not insignificantly, federal theology was
closely aligned with the quest for fundamental articles.
As the course of analysis moves from Rainy to the Ritschlian-inspired
critique of doctrine, the fate of seventeenth-century federal theology casts a
shadow too. The historicizing tendency of some federalists left them prey to
the powerful influence of anthropocentric Cartesian philosophy then sweeping
through many north European universities in the seventeenth century. The
human side of the history of the covenants came into sharpest focus: gazing
“from below” at the history of redemption, they lost the anchor thrown into
history “from above”. As we have seen, Rainy intended nothing like this. But
did his attention to the delivery of revelation in what he called “human tracks
103 Busch, “Der Beitrag und Ertrag der Föderaltheologie für ein geschichtliches Verständnis der Offenbarung,” 173; see also Link, “Föderaltheologie,” 174.
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of thought and feeling” (123) and the very human process of the formation of
doctrine abet others in his tradition to consider doctrine as all too human? This
connection will become clearer as we turn to a peer who sought to free the
living Christ of history from the musty shrouds of dogma.
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Chapter 4
A. B. Bruce and the “Ritschlian” Critique of Doctrine
Ah, but I was so much older then,/ I'm younger than that now.
- Bob Dylan1
4.1. Introduction
Amidst the euphoria at the FC’s jubilee Assembly in 1893, the
Manchester Baptist Alexander Maclaren’s plenary address posed a sober
question about the future. “We have heard very much of late about the return
of this generation to Jesus Christ as the centre of all our religion. But, but what
Christ is it that we are going back to?” His question would have surely
touched nerves. Some in the FC looked back to the rigorous Calvinism of the
Disruption fathers as a rock for all ages; some looked for a church to arise
whose cornerstone was hewn directly from the original evangel. “Is your
historical Christ the divine Christ? …Is your historical Christ the risen,
ascended, royal Christ?”2
Protestants in late Victorian times were harkening ‘back to Christ’.
This was a movement related to but distinct from the shift in theological
thinking from atonement to incarnation that had occurred earlier in the
century—“the new emphasis on Jesus as man rather than lamb”3—that had
affected even evangelicalism (see 1.4.5). “But, but what Christ is it that we are
going back to?” wondered Maclaren. In fact the dogma of Christ was losing its
evocative hold on the religious affections of most Victorians, even where it
still persisted as official church teaching and even though some Protestants at
century’s end were using idealist philosophy to bloat the two-natures symbol
1 Bob Dylan, “My Back Pages,” Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964), [www.bobdylan.com/songs/my-back-pages]. 2 Proceedings and Debates of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland, 1893 (Edinburgh: Ballatyne, Hanson & Co., 1893), 79-80. 3 Boyd Hilton, The Age of Atonement: The Influence of Evangelicalism on Social and Economic Thought, 1795-1865 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988), 5.
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into grand Christic cosmologies.4 For the most part, going ‘back to Christ’
entailed leaping over the sublime dogma of the incarnation constructed by the
church fathers to the simple Jesus of history recorded by the evangelists. It
was not a program or a method but simply an overriding focus on the human
Christ that carried both diffusive religious manifestations—tangling together
everything from mantle piece lithographs of a handsome saviour to dulcet
Sunday school songs of Jesus the friend of children to socialist political
agendas inspired by the Beatitudes—and sharp theological challenges. For the
agitation by many late Victorian Protestants for a practical and non-dogmatic
religion centred upon the teaching and example of Jesus was a tantrum against
the form of orthodoxy when not the content. ‘Back to Christ’ was a cry for a
creed beyond the longstanding quarrels of Protestantism; it was a plea for a
living faith unencumbered by airy doctrines, a liveable faith whose helping
hands were not bound by antiquated traditions. One defining impulse in
Scotland came through the American evangelist Dwight Moody’s 1873-74
crusade, which saw Presbyterian factions finding unity beyond doctrinal
difference in Moody’s stirring message of the Father’s love in Christ for all
sinners, his non-partisan appeal to the Bible as the basis of belief, and his call
for cooperative Christian social action.5
Theology proper stood in reciprocity to the movement ‘back to Christ’.
On one hand, Jesus needed to be protected from the theologians. Indeed, of the
plethora of Victorian ‘lives of Jesus’ that played out the story of the Saviour as
a fast-paced novel, many were concerned to make the emerging results of the
historical-critical study of the New Testament palatable by consoling readers
that the cherished man from Galilee remained unperturbed by scholars’
findings, however much the critical juggernaut had shattered old
interpretations of other parts of the Bible.6 On the other hand, Jesus needed to
be saved from the church. A. B. Bruce was one of many theologians convicted
4 E.g. Charles Gore, ed. Lux Mundi: A Series of Studies in the Religion of the Incarnation (London: John Murray, 1889); John Caird, The Fundamental Ideas of Christianity, 2 vol. (Glasgow: Maclehose, 1900). See the literature cited in chapter 5, footnote 3. 5 See K. R. Ross, “Calvinists in Controversy: John Kennedy, Horatius Bonar and the Moody Mission of 1873-74,” SBET 9 (1991): 51-63. 6 A fascinating account is Daniel Pals, The Victorian ‘Lives’ of Jesus (San Antonio: Trinity P, 1982).
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that “to ‘re-conceive the Christ’ in a spirit of historic fidelity is an urgent task
of vital consequence to the Church’s spiritual health.”
The ecclesiastical Christ is to a large extent not the Christ of the Gospels, but a creation of scholastic theology. Notwithstanding all our preaching, Jesus Christ is not well known… Men are not permitted to see Jesus with open face, but only through the thick veil of a dogmatic system… By remounting to the fountain of inspiration, instead of tarrying by cisterns in which the waters of life have become putrid and unwholesome, the Church will renew its youth with beneficent results in all directions.7
The historical approach to the gospels he and others pursed with alacrity in
order to recover Jesus Christ became both cause and conduit of the wider
movement back to Christ. In this sense, then, what Bruce expressed in
shorthand as the “Galilean gospel” demands the attention of this study
inasmuch as it was aligned with a negative judgement on traditional Christian
doctrine and creeds. Going ‘back to Christ’ typically combined an
unfavourable account of the rise of the ecclesiastical doctrine, especially the
dogma of Christ, with a vision of a future faith in which the unwieldy creeds
of the past had been sublated into the answer to the only question that really
mattered: “But whom say ye that I am?” (Mark 8:29).
Already in his 1881 address to the Presbyterian Alliance meeting in
Philadelphia, Rainy had remonstrated against this growing sentiment. It would
eviscerate Reformed Protestantism, he warned.8 Yet the next decades saw
leading evangelical and Reformed minds fleeing the old confessions back to
Christ, many of them riding the slipstream of a rising power in German
Protestant theology, the Göttingen professor Albrecht Ritschl. The Glasgow
FC College professor Bruce was one of them—indeed, perhaps the superlative
British example of the ‘back to Christ’ movement9—and this chapter assesses
his thought in reference to his tradition’s ongoing struggle with the problems
posed for church doctrine by the rise of an historical consciousness. Bruce’s
corpus, which formed one of the most widely read bodies of theological
literature of its day, sharply differentiated the ecclesiastical Christ from the
7 Bruce, The Kingdom of God; Christ’s Teaching according to the Synoptical Gospels, 4th ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1891), 348-49. 8 Rainy, “MTT,” 79. 9 As claimed by George R. Logan, “Alexander Balmain Bruce: A Review of His Contribution to New Testament Study and to Theology,” (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1950), 71.
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Jesus of the gospels; his diverse apologetic and biblical studies stand in unity
as a concerted attempt to puncture the former so as to let the light of the latter
shine through more brightly. Scholarly specialization meant he never strayed
beyond the first century of the Christian era to offer a full-fledged account of
the development of doctrine. Yet he so obviously appropriated the general
tendencies of Ritschl’s school that his overall treatment of the nature of
doctrine and rise of dogma partook of its influential interpretation of dogma as
the bitter fruit of the miscegenation of the gospel. For this reason, Bruce is of
immense significance for the wider contours of this dissertation: the Ritschlian
perspective on doctrine that is refracted in his corpus would become the point
of departure for almost all subsequent Dogmengeschichten, and continues to
this day to feed popular malcontent with the theological and ecclesiastical
status quo.10 Any study of the ‘problem of doctrine and history’ that aims for
historical comprehensiveness and hopes for relevancy simply must account for
it.
True, the link between Bruce and Ritschl can be challenged. “In Great
Britain the Ritschlian school never made much headway,” argued Horton
Harris, “since it was strongly opposed by Orr and [James] Denney, and its
supporters were never able to find a champion who could match Orr’s breadth
and depth of knowledge of the Ritschlian theology.”11 No Ritschlian school
formed in Scotland. But it is a patent “Germanism” to presume that the
absence of a school signifies the silence of the master.12 Accordingly, a
biographical sketch of Bruce and then a quick tracing of the lineaments of the
Ritschlian theology as they pertain to the ‘problem of doctrine’ will be
followed by a few remarks as to why this school did attract late Victorian
evangelical Presbyterians like Bruce.
10 Demonstrated by Lohse, “Theorien der Dogmengeschichte in evangelischen Raum heute,” in Dogmengeschichte und katholische Theologie, ed. Werner Löser et al (Würzburg: Echter, 1985), 97-109. 11 Horton Harris, “Albrecht Ritschl’s Theology: An Investigation into its Origin and Development,” (DTheol diss., Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, 1970), 323. 12 Harris is simply wrong concerning Denney, whose Studies in Theology (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1895), while explicitly critical of Ritschl (see 2-3, 17-18, 197, 258), still proceed with him by way of Christology and lean upon Harnack’s scholarship to document a “fall” of the post apostolic church. Further, Denney’s New Testament contributions exemplify the Ritschlian disinterest in Christ’s person apart from his work.
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4.2. Alexander Balmain Bruce (1831-1899)13
In 1890 Bruce was arraigned before the FC General Assembly to
answer for his recent book The Kingdom of God.14 His friend and fresh
appointee to the chair of New Testament at New College, Marcus Dods, who
had been irking conservatives for some time as a leader of the “Scottish
mediating theology,”15 stood trial separately at the same Assembly. With the
smoke from the Robertson Smith conflagration still lingering in Scotland, the
evangelical world watched with baited breadth. A host of accusations were
thrown at the Glasgow professor: contravening the Confession by endorsing
universal election as well as admitting discrepancies in the biblical text;
suggesting the evangelists tampered with narratives for theological effect;
keeping company with Germans of ill repute like Ritschl; impugning the
honor of the church with statements like: “the Church is only a means to an
end. It is good only in so far as it is Christian…”16 Along with a wry appeal to
the book’s favorable reception in unimpeachable Princeton, Bruce insisted that
the blacklisted portions needed to be read as an apologetic tactic of vindicating
the gospels by meeting skeptics down at their level rather than from the
heights of orthodoxy. His passionate rejoinder carried the delegates’ votes. It
also carried a candid personal recollection of a young man’s journey through
the slough of skepticism. For Bruce had been a casualty of what is now
stereotyped as a ‘Victorian crisis of faith’.
He had come down to Edinburgh from a Perthshire farm in the early
1840s. After studying at the university, he ascended to New College in 1849
only to be enveloped upon the Mound by a cloud of intellectual doubt and
13 For Bruce see John E. McFayden, “Professor Alexander Balmain Bruce. An Appreciation,” BW 15 (1900): 87-104; Michael Jinkins, “Bruce, Alexander Balmain (1831–1899),” ODNB [http://www.oxforddnb. com/view/article/3724, accessed 9 Oct 2008]; Sell, Defending and Declaring the Faith: Some Scottish Examples (Exeter: Paternoster, 1987), 89-117 [hereafter abbreviated as D&DF]; Logan, “Alexander Balmain Bruce.” 14 See “Special Report on the Case of Professor Bruce,” in Proceedings and Debates of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland, 1890 (Edinburgh: Ballatyne, Hanson & Co., 1890), 145-80; a full account is also provided by Sterling J. Edwards, “Marcus Dods: With Special Reference to his Teaching Ministry,” (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1960), 148-81. 15 Robert Watts, Dr. Dods’ St. Giles Sermon on the Essentials of Christianity; or, the New Scottish Homiletic. A Review (Edinburgh: James Gemmell, 1889), 4. 16 The Kingdom of God, 272.
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spiritual despondency brought about by David Strauss’ Leben Jesu.17 This betê
noire of nineteenth-century theology slashed deeper into the gospel records
than had even his teacher, F. C. Baur, using the Hegelian distinction between
conceptual truth (Begriff) and its depiction (Darstellung) to commend the
eternal relevance of Christ to modern Christians only once he had been
extracted from the historical slag of the gospels. “Many a one,” Bruce
recalled,
now well established in faith, can remember the sensations of horror and despair which seized his heart when, with the hunger of a student, he devoured that tremendous book, finding intellectual gratification in its clear trenchant style and rigorous logic, and possibly deriving a certain furtive pleasure from its sceptical tone, only however to exchange the sweetness in the mouth, while the pages were being turned over, for intense bitterness in the inward parts, when the work had been perused and its drift realised.18
His childhood evangelicalism was left in tatters. And the ironclad Calvinism
of New College professors like Cunningham could not recover old certainties
for him.
Unlike many of his contemporaries, Bruce did find his way back to the
light. Over a long probationary period he was helped by the moral heroism of
Carlyle, the broad church sermons of Robertson of Brighton, and above all, by
turning away from church dogmatics to seek Christ anew in the gospels. Leben
Jesu is said to have set the agenda for nineteenth-century New Testament
studies. It set Bruce’s agenda too. Not only was his very first publication a
collaborative translation of one of the legion of orthodox German attempts to
defuse Strauss’ bomb, his crisis of faith resolved him to commit his life to
piercing the shadows of modern doubt with the “brightness and unearthly
beauty” of Jesus.19 His mandate, he declared to the Assembly, had become:
“Have I seen Christ and helped others see Him?”20 His life’s task was to be the
cultivation of what he called “exegetical apologetics”: building up the
17 See Horton Harris, David Friedrich Strauss and his Theology (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1973), 58-84. 18 Bruce, “The Apologetic Function of the Church in the Present Time,” BFER 25 (1876): 646. 19 J. H. A. Ebrard, The Gospel History, trans. James Martin, ed. A. B. Bruce (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1863). Dods, whose career followed a similar path toward critical study of Scripture and a theology with Ritschlian overtones, edited around the same time another heavyweight German response to Strauss: J. P. Lange, The Life of the Lord Jesus Christ, trans. Sophia Taylor (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1864). 20 “Special Report on the Case of Professor Bruce,” 176.
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historical facts for Jesus while tearing down all that obscured him—be it old
orthodoxies or new ideologies. That Bruce’s message as preacher and
professor was born of a doubt-scarred faith gave it the perfect pitch for late
Victorian Protestantism, and a whole generation of evangelical pastors sought
his help to speak the gospel to the seekers and the tremblers of their fretful
age.
In 1875 he left his pastoral charge of Broughty Ferry for the chair of
New Testament and Apologetics at Glasgow FC College. The symbiosis of the
two disciplines into a single post had been a rather belated rearguard action of
the FC to fortify ordinands against Baur. As incumbent of the chair Bruce
fulfilled the terms to remarkable effect for the next quarter-century. It would
be amiss to forget that many biblical works of this British pioneer of the
critical study of the New Testament were concerned to make Jesus familiar to
those who had confused him for the pale Christ of church dogma or had
abandoned him for a gaudy idol of the age.21 Likewise, his often reprinted
Apologetics (1892), and even his 1896-97 Gifford Lectures on providence and
moral order in the world rest their final case upon the remarkable fact of the
life and teaching of Jesus Christ as recorded in the gospel histories.
In an obituary notice upon Bruce’s 1899 death, John McFayden of
Knox College, Toronto, suggested that his erstwhile teacher’s spiritual history,
theological method, and personal creed found striking affinity to Luther. He
too straddled the divide between theological eras.22 “At transition times,”
Bruce had written, “when an old world is passing away, and a new world is
taking its place, it is ever the fewest who enter with intelligence and sympathy
into the spirit of the new times.”23 Through sermons and scholarship,
convenorship of a hymnbook committee that brought the songs of a new day
into the psalm-singing FC, and agitation for a contemporary confession of
faith, Bruce laboured to bring Presbyterians into the new era. Thus he was, as
21 See Ernest Best, “The Study of the New Testament in Glasgow from the Disruption to the First World War,” in Traditions of Theology in Glasgow 1450-1990, ed. W. Ian P. Hazlett (Edinburgh: Scottish Academic P, 1993), 27-42; especially Riesen, Criticism and Faith in Late Victorian Scotland. 22 McFayden, “Professor Alexander Balmain Bruce,” 99. 23 Bruce, The Epistle to the Hebrews: the First Apology for Christianity (Edinburgh, T. & T. Clark, 1899), 20.
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one student fondly recalled, “the epoch-maker” for many in his tradition at the
fin de siécle.24
4.3. Ritschlianism and Scottish Theology [4.3.1] Albrecht Ritschl was in fact the epoch maker of late nineteenth
and early twentieth-century theology, even if the twentieth century’s greatest
theologian, Karl Barth, has persuaded most that he was merely an evanescent
episode.25 A growing number of scholars, however, are not only revisiting
Ritschl as the sine non qua of Protestant theology in the four decades before
the Great War, they are noting striking family resemblances between Ritschl
and his rebellious neo-orthodox brood.26 The heavily tinted “Barthian lens”
worn by much of the modern historiography of theology loses the trace of
Ritschl’s footprints through twentieth-century theology even as it fails to see
the meteoric path he burned through his time. An unfriendly German
correspondent captured the latter well in a breathless report to an American
audience in 1891.
No dogmatician of this century has created such a profound sensation…. In a short time he had founded a school, and his disciples are now more and more filling up the academic chairs of instruction. Since his death in 1889 his place in Göttingen has been occupied by Häring of Württemberg. In Berlin there is Kaftan. In Giessen he has captured the entire faculty, as also in Marburg, where he is represented especially by Herrmann. In France too and in Switzerland he has won followers to himself. In fact the talk now is of universal conquest.27
Ritschl’s victory march was nowhere near as total as some feared. But
the young talent that gathered around him by the mid 1870s to form a loose
“Ritschlian school” profoundly impacted subsequent church and theology in
Germany. Ritschl’s international influence was posthumous, as a crowd of
Scottish and American students began in the 1890s to carry his school’s aims
and methods back home from Berlin, Marburg, and Jena right up until the
Great War put an end to such happy Studienjahre. Ritschlianism was always
24 W. M. MacGregor, A Souvenir of the Union of 1929, with an Historical Sketch of the United Free Church College, Glasgow (Glasgow: Wm. Collins, Sons, and Co., 1930), 10. The emphasis is his. 25 Barth, PT, 640-47. 26 See the literature cited in “Introduction,” page 6. 27 Adolph Zahn, “The Drift of Dogmatic Thought in Germany during the Last Decade,” PRR 2 (1891): 447.
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diverse to an extent, and even by its founder’s death was fracturing—the left
wing being identified with the so-called historical study of religion school
[religionsgeschichte Schule]. Yet its core concerns, dispersed, diluted, or
developed, would dominate twentieth-century theology through progeny as
different as Barth, Bultmann, and the Baillies.
Ritschlianism was less the systematization of its namesake’s thought
than a coalition of scholars and ecclesiastics who followed his lead in pursuing
several regulative aims into the fields of systematic theology, ethics, biblical
studies, church history, and the history of dogma.28 Orr summarized well the
school’s common method and generic features as encountered by Victorian
Protestantism:
the strong contrast…between religious and theoretical knowledge; the desire to free theology from all association with, and dependence on, metaphysics; the insisting on the positive revelation in Christ as the one source of true religious knowledge; the central position they all assign to the doctrine of the kingdom of God, and their making of this conception determinative of every other notion in theology…; the rigorous exclusion from theology of everything which lies outside the earthly manifestation of Christ (e.g. pre-existence, eschatology); and finally, the distrust of, and antagonism to, everything of the nature of mysticism in religion.29
What was perhaps Ritschlianism’s paramount concern, namely, to let the
singularity of God’s revelation in the historical person of Jesus Christ sharply
limit both the manner in which the church receives revelation and its content,
was in fact the very same concern pulsing through Bruce’s mandate of
exegetical apologetics. It is thus necessary to glance at several of the tenets
identified by Orr as characteristically Ritschlian to perceive how they
sharpened historical focus on the Jesus behind the church’s doctrinal tradition.
The late nineteenth century’s sobered-up intellect and subdued spirit is
reflected in piercing clarity in Ritschlianism. The exalted ideal of mediation 28 Among the considerable literature on Ritschlianism I have found useful: Helmut Thielicke, “Albrecht Ritschl,” in Modern Faith and Thought, trans. Geoffrey Bromiley (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1990), 324-44; Welch, Protestant Thought in the Nineteenth Century, 2: 1-30; Eckhard Lessing, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen evangelischen Theologie von Albrecht Ritschl bis zu Gegenwart, Bd.1: 1870-1918 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2000), 79-116, 181-86, 197-204, 218-29; E. P. Meijering, Theologische Urteile über die Dogmengeschichte. Ritschls Einfluss auf Harnack (Leiden; Brill, 1978). 29 Orr, Ritschlianism: Essays Critical and Expository (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1903), 55.
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(see 1.3.3) that had characterized mainstream German theology since
Schleiermacher, which ambitiously sought the reconciliation of traditional
Christian belief with modern thought, divine immanence with transcendence,
church with world, seemed exhausted. Mediating theologians had presumed
that historical criticism would not and could not contradict the church’s
Glaubenslehre. But as a student, Ritschl too had been deeply unsettled by
Strauss’ Leben Jesu, and the subsequent development of the discipline of
biblical criticism seemed to be confirming what Troeltsch and others would
later argue, namely, that the historical-critical method per se could only
undermine traditional doctrines and dogmatic belief.30 The best cultural ideals,
philosophical concepts, and scientific hypotheses had been enlisted with
utmost confidence to serve mediating theologies. But if the romantic
conception of humankind as an historical organism had earlier inspired the
poets and tempted the philosophers and theologians to exalt the corporate and
esteem the ancient, in the Wilhelminen era the integrity of the individual over
against das Ganze desperately needed to be safeguarded from the ravages of
industrial society and an aggressive naturalism.31 How could a philosophical-
aesthetic depiction of God as historically immanent in the world prevent
Providence from being muscled aside by the machines or the determinism of
Darwin?
Ritschl, whose own Göttingen University was a centre of German
empiricism, developed a theology for an age whose concern for the real, the
practical, and the scientific was presenting very new challenges to Christian
faith. The result was a fresh mediation of central Lutheran tenets with the so-
called positive-historical (as opposed to speculative) method then ascending in
German scholarship. Ritschlianism’s beating heart was Luther’s slogan of
solus Christus. Only from Jesus do we learn that God loves us as a father and
wills us to partake of his benevolent kingdom. Only in Jesus is human
personhood affirmed as believers share in his knowledge of being accepted
before God as a beloved son, as Ritschl reworked the Lutheran doctrine of
30 Ernst Troeltsch, “Historische und dogmatische Methode in der Theologie [1898],” in Gesammelte Schriften, Bd. 2 (Tübingen: Mohr, 1913), 729-53. 31 Hugh McLeod, Piety and Poverty: Working Class Religion in Berlin, London and New York, 1870-1914 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1996) illustrates the religious dilemmas created by Germany’s rapid industrialization.
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justification; reconciliation is the church living out Jesus’ victory over the
forces that oppress and dehumanize.32 Solus Christus, however, was not only
content but also epistemology. Ritschlianism raised loud protest against any
theology that soared beyond the revelation of God in the historical Jesus.
Natural theology was disqualified outright. So too were all theologies that
sought God in Blut und Volk or that swamped Jesus under a philosophical
system, as did Baur, Hegel, and many mediating theologians. Chastened too
are mystics and pietists who seek a Saviour in the heart rather than in history.
Schleiermacher, complained Ritschl, should have “taken his final bearings in
the realm of the history of religion,” namely the gospel histories, rather than
with Gefühl.33 Christian theology is grounded in the facts of history and
experience mediated through the historical Jesus. So when Adolph Harnack
(1851-1930) famously asked after the essence of Christianity, he insisted that
the answer could be made only in “an historical sense.”34
The disavowal of a speculative starting point for theological reflection
was boosted by a concurrent neo-Kantian revival in Germany. Ritschl began to
use the neo-Kantian argument against metaphysical speculation to justify the
delimitation of theology to the historical person of Christ and his eminently
practical message of the kingdom of God.35 The adage of Christus pro nobis
the Ritschlians adopted from older Lutheranism—a refusal (in principle) to
consider Christ from a speculative basis but only from his relationship to
believers—was philosophically tightened by the neo-Kantian notion of value
judgments, which posited that one can ascribe meaning to any fact, even the
gospel facts, only in its relation to or value for us. Hence Ritschl’s three-
volume magnum opus The Christian Doctrine of Justification and
Reconciliation put the work of Christ back on the agenda of German
Protestant theology. What Jesus did and taught was concretely historical and
personal; who Jesus was is speculative and abstract. Ritschl considered that in
some sense Jesus is the Christ because he alone offers the answer to the 32 See McGrath, Iustitia Dei, 381-92. 33 Ritschl, The Christian Doctrine of Justification and Reconciliation, Vol. 3, trans. H. R. Mackintosh and A. B. Macauley (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1909), 9. 34 Adolph Harnack, What is Christianity? trans. T. B. Saunders (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1912), 6-7. 35 The Marburg theologian Wilhelm Herrmann (1846-1922), especially, encouraged his mentor to use Kant. See Christophe Chalamet, “Wilhelm Herrmann and the Birth of the Ritschlian School,” JHMTh 15 (2008): 263-89.
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question of human existence: how can humanity overcome the contradictions
of natural existence? In his own death and resurrection he refused to bow his
will before the world, thereby overcoming the domination of soul by the
‘powers’ and securing the transcendence of the ethical individual over the
natural order.36 Further, the Kantian current in Germany reinforced the
Ritschlian focus on Jesus’ proclamation of the kingdom of God as the
manifestation of humanity’s reconciled state. Long subordinated in catholic
Christianity to dogma or blithely equated with the church, the concept of the
kingdom in Ritschl’s opinion had only lately received due attention in
Schleiermacher’s awakened sense of the teleological nature of Christianity,
but above all in Kant, who was among the first to recognize both the centrality
of the historical Jesus’ proclamation of the kingdom and its ethical rather than
ecclesial shape.37
Under Luther’s venerable banner the Ritschlians raised anew the older
critics’ protest that dogma shackled the Christian conscience to churchly
authority. Justification by faith places the individual in direct relationship with
God through Christ, and the church wrongly infringes upon this intimacy
when it insists upon mediating faith through dogma, sacrament, or priest.38 Yet
this appeal to justification would seem to reflect less the old Lutherans’
concern with the righteousness of God (iustitia dei) than the neo-Kantians’
concern with human freedom: the Christian soul must be shielded against the
domineering entanglement of the natural world or ecclesiastical authority.
More substantially, its peculiar take on solus Christus depreciated the status of
doctrine in the church’s life and turned Jesus against church tradition. The
trajectory coursing out of Pietism and through the German Enlightenment that
sought to liberate the religion of Jesus from the dogma of the church (see
1.3.2) received at Ritschlian hands’ unprecedented epistemological refinement
and historical rigor. The insistence that faith has no business with anything
above or beyond God’s revelation in Jesus prejudiced the impressive
theological systems and profound dogmas of orthodoxy in favor of a simple,
eminently practical gospel rooted in primitive Christian beliefs about its Lord.
36 Ritschl, “Instruction in the Christian Religion,” in Three Essays, trans. and ed. Philip Hefner (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1972), 8, 23. 37 The Christian Doctrine of Justification and Reconciliation, 3:11. 38 The Christian Doctrine of Justification and Reconciliation, 3:261-62.
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Christianity is not a set of doctrines to be believed, after all, but a life to be
lived in union, i.e., ethical imitation, with Jesus Christ.
This suspicion of each and every thought that strayed behind the
historical Jesus to ontology or soared beyond the ethical kingdom of God to
metaphysics underwrote the famous ‘Hellenization thesis’ of doctrinal origins,
which was evident already in Ritschl’s Baur-breaking Die Entstehung der
altkatholischen Kirche (2nd ed., 1857), and held by all Ritschlians to some
degree.39 As the post apostolic church extended beyond Judaism into the
Gentile world it struck a fateful compromise in order to make its message
intelligible. Hellenistic patterns of thought came to subsume the gospel. The
church’s mind became metaphysical rather than historical, the ethical potency
of the original message of Jesus was weakened or even obscured, and the New
Testament notion of faith as personal trust hardened into a concept of decreti
borrowed from the philosophical schools or Roman courts.40 Classical
Christian dogma is tainted by the sublation of the gospel by the speculative
thought of the Greeks. Like earlier proponents of a Hellenization thesis,
Ritschlianism depicted the rise of ecclesiastical doctrine as a regress from the
simple utterances of faith to intellectually complex dogmas; the history of
doctrine tells a sad story of an early error never repented of, a wrong step
never retraced. Luther was one of the few who caught a glimpse of the true
nature of faith, although even he (much less his followers) never quite freed
himself from the grip of the dogmatic mindset.
In this line of thought, then, Dogmengeschichte becomes indispensable
for the church, and it is little wonder that Ritschlians like Harnack, Karl Holl
(1866-1926), Ferdinand Kattenbusch (1851-1935), Friedrich Loofs (1858-
1928), and Gustav Krüger (1862-1940) excelled in this field. It shows, as the
latter argued, how “not to mix up the form with the thing [Sache], the dogma
with the gospel.”41 With tools of the trade honed sharp since the
Enlightenment, the historian of doctrine saves the contemporary church from
redundancy by making the life-saving incisions between the ancient and
39 James Orr, Ritschlianism and the Evangelical Faith (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1897), 191-92. 40 A concise statement can be found in Harnack, Outlines of the History of Dogma, 5. 41 Krüger, Was heißt und zu welchem Ende studiert man Dogmengeschichte?, 55-56.
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eternal gospel and its contextualization as dogma and institutional religion
during the birth of orthodoxy.
That die Sache was not necessarily the religious world of first-century
Judaism has been muddied by the fact that the Hellenization thesis inspired
many twentieth-century theologians to derive theological capital from a
purported antagonism between Hebrew and Greek thought. But Ritschlians
themselves aimed to distil the essence of Christianity from the “Jewishness” of
Jesus.42 The historical study of the origins and development of doctrine rightly
divides content from context, eternal truth from historical trapping, back to
Jesus himself. For all the diversity within the Ritschlian school—and it came
to quarrel fiercely over how deeply Hellenistic ideas penetrated the New
Testament, and whether it was even possible to untangle Jesus’ key religious
ideas from his Jewish worldview without (as the religionsgeschichte Schule
argued) contravening impartial historical inquiry43—the Hellenization thesis
remained largely intact. If ostensibly a purely historical description of the
formation of Christian doctrine, it was loaded with ecclesial and theological
repercussions, and would long outlive the demise of the Ritschlian school
proper.
[4.3.2] In the late 1880s Ritschlianism began gathering real momentum
in Britain, although really only among English Nonconformists and Scots. It
accelerated over the next decades, attracting both acclaim and argument.44
What drew evangelicals to it? True, that it could appear obsequious to the
Protestant pillars of Bible and Reformation gave it a “ring of orthodoxy” that
rankled conservative critics as a theological Trojan horse.45 Yet real
Anknüpfungspunkte were found between the Ritschlian resort to the biblical
Jesus behind church tradition and an evangelical Biblicism that had often
abetted a callous handling of church tradition and a careless disregard for the
historical gestation of doctrine, as well as Ritschlianism’s sharp focus on the
42 Harnack claimed that Jesus’ greatness consists precisely in the fact “that he did not become entangled in his times” (Outlines of the History of Dogma, 4). 43 Rupp, Cultural Protestantism: German Liberal Theology at the Turn of the Twentieth Century (Missoula, Montana: Scholars P, 1977), 23. 44 For Ritschl’s British reception see Alan Sell, “Ritschl Appraised: Then and Now,” RTR 38 (1979): 33-41. 45 Harris, Albrecht Ritschl’s Theology, 322.
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concreteness of Jesus’ work and proclamation of the rule of God (rather than
the speculative dogma of the person of Christ) with traditional evangelical
crucicentrism and moral activism. Victorian evangelicalism was also a species
of cultural Protestantism, even if its grip on society was loosening at century’s
end.46 The Ritschlian watchword of ‘back to Christ’ promised a certain gospel
to an often anxious generation, and was thus deeply attractive to evangelicals
desirous to reach their age with the gospel, or, alternately, made insecure by
their age’s objections to traditional Christianity.
Consider the Aberdeen theologian David S. Cairns (1862–1946).47 He
remembered an addled student body at the UP Divinity Hall during his studies
in the late 1880s: doubts about the reliability of the gospels and the reality of
God; atheistic philosophies and empirical science threatening old dogmas and
the traditional worldview; isolation from their professors whose beliefs
seemed to belong to a more tranquil age of faith. Students returning from
semesters in Germany told of a prophet in Marburg; piqued, Cairns went
himself in hopes of salvaging his evangelical beliefs. While the theology
faculty at Berlin, which boasted Ritschlians like Julius Kaftan (1848-1926)
and Harnack, was a destination for ambitious FC and UP (and, post 1900,
UFC) students, Herrmann was a phenomenon. Cairns recalled a lecture-room
atmosphere like a prayer meeting—tears streamed down Herrmann’s face as
he warned his students of the dangers of materialistic science and pointed
them to the saviour Jesus Christ. The idealist theologians spoke of God, Cairns
recalled thinking, but only Ritschlians knew den lebendigen Gott revealed in
Jesus. Herrmann offered battered evangelicals like Cairns a Ritschlian solace:
Jesus’ inspiring teaching instead of the old dogmas then under fire as morally
repugnant or metaphysically abstract, and a faith kept safe from critics’
scalpel-work on the Bible because Christ made himself present to souls
through the experience of faith.
Unlike in America, where Ritschlianism bore great fruit as the ‘social
gospel’, in Britain few Scots were fully persuaded. Ritschlian notes would
46 See David W. Smith, Transforming the World? The Social Impact of British Evangelicalism (Carlisle: Paternoster, 1998), especially 42-74. 47 For what follows see David S. Cairns, An Autobiography (London: SCM, 1950), 123-37.
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resound for a long time from Caledonian pulpits and lecture rooms, however.48
H.R. Mackintosh’s shrewd observation made in 1923 was as true before the
mighty influx of Barth’s theology in Scotland as it was after: “the careful
observer of theology will perceive that Ritschlian ideas are now in circulation
more widely than is readily owned.”49 Simply put, Ritschl spoke the timely
word to his generation. John Dickie recalled the turn of the twentieth century
as a time when many Presbyterians came to believe that “the ultimate
problems of theology and Bible [were being] tackled with great courage, and
even something like finality […] in Berlin, Göttingen, and Marburg.”50 The
great theologians who came of age in the UFC, like Cairns, Mackintosh, John
Oman, and John and Donald Baillie sat at the feet of Ritschlians. The so-called
liberal evangelicalism they propounded was prepared by an earlier generation
of Scottish evangelicals, Congregationalists like Robert Mackintosh and P. T.
Forsyth, and Presbyterians like Denney and Bruce, who selectively used
Ritschlianism blocks to shore up the house of evangelical theology against the
storms of the age.
4.4. Jesus of Nazareth and the Christ of Chalcedon
[4.4.1] The best point of entry to Bruce’s mind on doctrine, history,
and church over thirty years of scholarship is his second and most overtly
dogmatic work, The Humiliation of the Christ (1875). This is a finely tuned
overview of the doctrine of the earthly existence of Christ [de statu Christi]
from the church fathers through the Reformation to recent “humanistic” and
(for the first time in English) kenotic theories, evaluated in light of the
Christological axioms of the New Testament.51 It commands attention here
less for its many illuminating analyses than for how it discloses how Bruce
viewed his very nineteenth-century project of exegetical apologetics as
springing from the soil of his own evangelical Reformed tradition, even whilst
48 For the social element see Donald J. Witherington, “The Churches in Scotland, c. 1870- c. 1900: Towards a New Social Conscience?” RSCHS 19 (1977): 155-68. 49 H. R. Mackintosh, Some Aspects of Christian Belief (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1923), 166. 50 Dickie, Fifty Years of British Theology, 5. 51 Bruce, The Humiliation of the Christ in its Physical, Ethical and Official Aspects, 4th ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1895). References to this work will be made within the text.
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extending the reformation of church and doctrine left unfinished in the
sixteenth century.
The Humiliation followed DDCD as Cunningham Lectures, and Bruce
appeared to commence his investigation with a nod to his immediate
predecessor: reverence and audacity are equally required to rise to the great
truths of Scripture. A bracing dose of the latter let Bruce register his dissent
from the entire catholic tradition for its oversight of what should be the main
business of Christology, namely, the historical life of Jesus (8). The ancient
creeds made scant reference to Jesus’ earthly life, and the topic was merely an
appendix to Reformed treatments of Christology and Soteriology or a prop for
the Lutheran position on the communicatio idiomatum. But if “the exclusive
study of the older dogmatists would tend to discourage the idea of
commencing a discussion on Christology with the doctrine of the Exinanition
as a mere conceit; or, to speak more correctly, it would probably prevent such
a thought from ever arising in the mind,” Scripture itself is not so shy in its
attention to Christ’s life and message. But this recognition has only lately
dawned as critical biblical scholarship has developed, and as a salutary by-
product of Christological debates within the new Prussian Union church (2-3,
44-46, 65-66).
This newfound insight was of the utmost importance for the
contemporary church’s predicament, for the life of Jesus is what most
resonates with a wholesome evangelical piety that could nourish the church
and commend its witness. As Bruce read recent church history, orthodoxy
began to wither in the previous century as dogmas came to be perceived by
many as having only scarce connection to what is “dear to the Christian heart.”
He wanted to brake this slide but not à la the old apologists for traditional
belief. Their trenchant opposition to a rationalism that emptied Christ of his
saving power was compromised by their commitment to a theological
“scholasticism” that so elevated Jesus above the inspiring facts of history as to
leave him bloodless. A Christian apologia for the nineteenth century needed to
revivify doctrines precisely through focus on their historically mediated moral
value (7-8). Hence, the recovery de statu Christi from orthodoxy’s bottom
shelf promised nothing less than the revitalization of both the doctrine of
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Christ and doctrine of God proper by investing both with a winsome ethical
interest (6).
Even as evangelical keynotes of Bible and piety permitted his protest
against orthodoxy’s neglect of the historical Jesus, so too was the Calvinist
mind enlisted. The reconstitution of theology around the sublime history of the
Son of God’s humiliation was a logical outcome of the classic Reformed
Christology. Delving deep into the fierce Protestant controversial literature
over the person of Christ, Bruce castigated the Lutherans for letting the
sacramental desideratum of corporeal ubiquity eradicate Christ’s genuine
humanity (83-84, 106-9). Whether in its extreme form, where the status
exinanitionis consists in Jesus’ possession of and frequent, furtive use of the
divine majesty, or in the milder form associated with the great Martin
Chemnitz (1522-86), where the Son of God only occasionally used his divine
powers, Lutheran Christology effectively routes the communication of idioms
solely from the divine to the human. As such, the gospels’ testimony to a
divine life under the ordinary conditions of human existence is recognized in
Lutheran Christology but not really accounted for: “incarnation in the
Lutheran Christology signifies simply the union of the Logos to a humanity
endowed with divine attributes... Incarnation and exinanition are entirely
distinct; the former in idea precedes the latter, and it does not necessarily
involve the latter” (112-13). Little wonder, surmised Bruce that Luther’s
nineteenth-century children teach the incarnation as the eternal identity of the
divine and the human realised in humanity at large (113-14). The theological
idea of incarnation has finally shed the historical humiliation of God’s Son.
But if the old Lutheran doctors were speculative in method and
theological in character, the Reformed were historical and anthropological.
Those old Calvinists wrote treatises on de veritate humanae naturae Christi,
not, as the Lutherans did, on de divina majestate Christi, because they
“adhered rigidly to the facts of the gospel history, and refused to draw any
speculative inferences from the doctrine of the Incarnation.” A consequence of
this intent to theologize from the historically tangible was an understanding of
incarnation as practically synonymous with exinatition (114-16), which
endows Reformed Christology with an ethical vigour that speaks directly to
modern times.
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Bruce appealed to Reformed orthodoxy as Ritschlians appealed to
Luther, namely, as a vintage theology promising the rejuvenation of
Christianity against modern detractors and popular apathy. But neither appeal
should be understood as intending slavish adherence to the past. For his part,
Bruce deemed the ancient dogma of Christ taken over by the Reformed
immeasurably superior to modern humanistic accounts but far from perfect
(192-94); he indicated at several points that Reformed Christology could be
improved simply by focusing on the moral rather than metaphysical union of
God and humankind in Jesus (what was, of course, the burden of Ritschlian
Christology).52 Indeed, in light of his lifelong labour to rid Christian doctrine
of its “scholastic” dress, The Humiliation’s deliberate recourse to the
Christology of the Reformed schoolmen appears bizarre. Yet note Hofmann’s
frequent appearances in The Humiliation.53 As Scottish evangelicals knew
well, the Erlangen theologian’s attempt to rethink Christianity as a history of
salvation rather than a system of doctrines gave him grave misgivings about
the appropriateness of the scholastic method employed by second-generation
Lutherans to collate Protestant belief.54 Strongly rebuked by more
conservative neo-Lutherans, he invoked both history against dogma and
Luther against the Lutherans—in other words, the spirit of the Reformation
against the scholastic mind. This controversy jogged Ritschl and his devotees
to the historical investigation of precisely those discrepancies between the
Reformers and their children.55 The Humiliation was Bruce’s singular visit to
the formative period of Protestantism. But rippling the pages of his subsequent
publications was the very same antagonism between history and classical
doctrine that nineteenth-century theological mavericks like Hofmann and
52 Lessing, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen evangelischen Theologie, 1:107-8. 53 John Dickie, “Modern Positive Theology,” ET 19 (1908): 508-9, noted the significance of Hofmann for Bruce, as does Pfleiderer, The Development of Protestant Theology, 469. 54 Hofmann’s historical approach minimized the law-gospel dialectic and “corrected” the confessional Lutheran position on biblical inspiration and atonement. The FC-connected British and Foreign Evangelical Review avidly followed the controversies among neo-Lutherans: e.g., James S. Candlish, “Hofmann and his Opponents,” BFER 14 (1865): 294-318; [?] Schneider, “The Lutheran Doctrine of Christ’s Vicarious Death,” BFER 10 (1861): 123-171; Dieckhoff, “System and Scripture: Dr. v. Hofmann,” 553-75. 55 See Welch, Protestant Thought in the Nineteenth Century, 1: 225. Neo-orthodox theologians would harden this gap into the axioms of ‘Calvin against the Calvinists’ and ‘Luther against the Lutherans’.
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Ritschl struck to vilify the rise of Protestant scholasticism for retarding the
Reformation.
In this sense then, what is significant in Bruce’s appeal to classical
Reformed Christology was its highly idealized description. It suggested rather
than actually provided the contours of a relevant commendation of the faith
rooted in status Christi, in which the church’s thinking about God begins with
the concreteness of the human rather than conjecture about the divine, and
where the metaphysical has been eschewed for the moral as “the highest, if not
the distinctive, in the Divine Being” (14). If the Scot has started out in the
evangelical Reformed ethos typical of the mid-century FC, the ellipse between
historical fact and ethical significance that he has seized upon by 1874 shows
him on the road to Ritschl.
[4.4.2] As the groundwork of Bruce’s thought, the ellipse between
history and ethics articulated already in The Humiliation would effect his
tearing down of the forms of traditional doctrine and confession to erect upon
the cornerstone of the historical Christ a faith for his age—what his critics
charged as built according to German specifications.56 This ellipse needs to be
laid bare: as with Cunningham and Rainy, the conception of revelation dictates
to a large extent the nature and form of doctrine. When excavated, the
religious motivations and contextual pressures behind Bruce’s methodological
‘turn to history’ are rendered visible, and in such a way, moreover, that the
lure of Ritschlianism for Victorian Protestants gains a more sympathetic
hearing than it might otherwise receive.
Bruce’s invitation to the church to quench its spiritual thirst at “the
pure fountain as it leaps sparkling into light in the evangelic memoirs” rather
than “the polluted waters of the River of Life far down the stream”57 was
provoked by what he perceived as the collapse of theological options—
evangelical, catholic, mediating—in a Zeitgeist that had soured on orthodoxy.
Pantheism and speculative theism were leeching Christian theology from
inside the church as, from the outside, an aggressive atheistic materialism
56 E.g., Peter Richardson, Dr. Bruce on “The Kingdom of God,” A Review (Glasgow: David Bryce & Son, 1890). 57 Bruce, “Theological Thought. The Historical Christ and Modern Christianity,” The Thinker 3 (1893): 28.
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promoted by prophets like Huxley and Strauss as the faith for a new age of
fact pushed, “like the Russian host at Inkerman, to drive us into the sea.”58 As
every Victorian reader knew, on the heights of Inkerman—a key battle in the
Crimean War—victory was achieved through close cooperation between
British and French field armies. But Bruce surveyed a church weakened by
division wrought by undue attachment to peripheral matters of doctrine and
practice. With enemies massing, none of the orthodox options at hand in the
late Victorian milieu could attain a unifying and compelling witness to the
heart of the Christian faith (the second pole of the ellipse) because all hesitated
at the steep indemnity it would demand: the forsaking of their beloved
theological systems and religious traditions for the Jesus of history (the first
pole of the ellipse). So they fell back on antiquated battle cries that neither
rallied the troops nor routed the enemy.
True, almost all contemporary theologies, liberal and orthodox, were
urging the church to re-centre on Christ. But to which Christ should the church
return? In those voices raised from across the theological spectrum advocating
the present Christ because they coveted the unshakeable certainty that history
purportedly cannot deliver, Bruce heard only self-serving expediency. First,
speculative theology treats the history of Jesus as scaffolding for timeless
ideas of incarnation, reconciliation, or moral self-sacrifice, which ultimately
stand independent of the gospel histories. But “disembodied ideas, however
angelic the ghosts may be, yield a religion deficient in ethical inspiration.”59
Second, the Tractarians present Christ through sacramental
machinations and the timeless dogmas of the early church. But the only
saviour they can bring near is the “conventional Christ” of ecclesiastical
tradition whose dogma befuddles the head as much as the sheen of his divinity
blinds the heart. The protective arms of Mother Church shelter this Christ
from Jesus’ thunder against religious tradition. Even the recent Lux Mundi
programme, which Bruce granted was concertedly trying to connect Anglo-
58 Bruce, “The Apologetic Function of the Church in the Present Time,” BFER 25 (1876): 643. Logan, “Alexander Balmain Bruce,” 269-75, summarizes Bruce’s apologetic. 59 “Theological Thought,” 28-29, 34.
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Catholicism with Jesus, remained too obsequious to the traditional dogma of
incarnation to see his visage.60
Third, the evangelical cherishes Christ in his or her heart as the risen
saviour; there, in the unassailable reality of religious experience, he is kept
safe from the wolves of criticism. Bruce relents most to this option:
evangelical keynotes of personal conversion and discipleship find significant
rapport in the Bible, as does its assumption that theology is rooted in
experience. But without greater attention to the objective witness of the
historical Jesus, evangelicals court Feuerbach’s charge of religious
anthropocentricism.61 Experience must be yoked to the fact of the history of
Jesus. Significantly, Bruce commends to them Herrmann’s The Communion of
the Christian with God—one of the spiritual classics of its era—as a profound
treatment of the intersection of religious experience, the historical Jesus, and
the (ethical) revitalization of Protestant doctrine.62 Later editions of the book,
sharpened in debate with Troeltsch, would disown any historically determined
foundation for faith as an apologetic prop incompatible with the epistemology
of justification by faith, but in the early 1890s Herrmann was still close to
Ritschl in insisting that faith must be rooted in personal encounter with the
historical fact of Jesus.63 Bruce found this salutary, although he was perturbed
by Herrmann’s equivocation about how much of the life of Jesus was
recoverable for the purposes of faith, or even needed to be.64 In any case,
Bruce honoured the Ritschlian school for pointing Protestant theology back to
the gospel histories, where Jesus’ open face can be seen stripped of the moss
of ages. “Some go to Oxford, some to Rome, and some to Keswick; let us not
forget to visit Nazareth.”65
60 Ibid., 31, 35-36. 61 Ibid., 37-38. 62 Bruce, Apologetics; or, Christianity Defensively Stated, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1895), 354, 404-5; also “Theological Thought,” 38-39. 63 Gary Dorrien, The Barthian Revolt in Modern Theology (Louisville: WJK, 2000), 14-27, summarizes Herrmann’s changing mind. 64 Bruce insisted more vigorously than did Herrmann that the “value of Jesus” depends on its objective historicity and not just its resonance with the moral conscience. Still deeply supernatural presuppositions gave him full confidence that criticism would establish rather than erode a fulsome life of the Christ, e.g., “To One who finds Scientific Bible Study Hostile to Devotion,” BW (1899): 409-12. 65 “Theological Thought,” 38.
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Clearly, the concept of revelation was the lynchpin of his critical
evaluation of the church’s predicament. Eager to return to Christ as the centre,
the various theological options of the day were stumbling over the fact of
historical revelation. Not even the Baconian method beloved by evangelicals
could attain the historical Jesus and his priorities, argued Bruce, disowning the
textbook definition of theological method he learned at New College from
Cunningham and Bannerman and propagated by his learned predecessor in the
chair of New Testament at Glasgow FC College, Patrick Fairbairn (1805-74)
(see 1.4.4).66 “What we find in theological systems based on Scripture texts is
a Hortus Siccus, or collection of dried plants, arranged according to their
specific resemblances for the purposes of science, but with the life pressed out
of them.”67 Despite its inductive approach, this method faltered at the source.
“Put the book foremost in your idea of revelation, and you almost invariably
think of revelation as consisting in words, doctrines.”68 It was Baur above all,
opined Bruce, whose rigorous historical examination of Christian origins
broke beyond repair the dogmatic reading of the Bible as containing a flat
credenda of doctrines. Even if the Tübingen school’s idealist presuppositions
left their own reconstructions of Christian history only “dead idea schemes, ”
they forced the church to reckon with the messy historicity of revelation.69
Evangelicals need to forsake their penchant for deriving from Scripture an
encyclopaedia of doctrines as incompatible with historical revelation as well
as injurious to the prospect of Christian unity. When every biblical teaching is
valued equally because each is equally “God-breathed” the church remains
66 Dods, Recent Progress in Theology. Inaugural Lecture, New College, Edinburgh, November 6th, 1889 (Edinburgh: Macnivan and Wallace, 1889), especially 9, 19, 29, 31, granted (rightly in my opinion) more affinity between the old evangelical method and historical critical approach than Bruce allowed. 67 Bruce, The Chief End of Revelation (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1881), 13. 68 The Chief End of Revelation, 56. 69 Bruce, Ferdinand Christian Baur and His Theory of the Origins of Christianity and of the New Testament Writings (London: The Religious Tract Society, 1886), 33-34. He unpacked the manifoldness of historical revelation in a four-part series: “The Teaching of Christ in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke,” BW 6 (1895): 455-66; “Four Types of Christian Thought. II. The Pauline Epistles,” BW 7 (1896): 6-19; “Four Types of Christian Thought. III. The Epistle to the Hebrews,” BW 7 (1896): 94-104; “Four Types of Christian Thought. IV. The Fourth Gospel,” BW 7 (1896): 168-79.
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incapable of staggering doctrine as fundamental or peripheral according to its
proximity to the perfect revelation of God in Christ.70
Similar in respects to Rainy’s endorsement of revelation as history,
Bruce was in fact striding boldly past the plodding FC leader. Progressive FC
thinkers like Dods, Bruce, and Robertson Smith wore openly their debt to
Richard Rothe (1799-1867) of Heidelberg, a mediating theologian renowned
at one and the same time for his deep piety and daring mind.71 Rothe’s Zur
Dogmatik (2nd ed. 1869) first struck the now common distinction between
revelation and Bible. Like Hofmann, he submerged divine revelation into the
flow of history; unlike Hofmann, with whom he crossed swords, Rothe
considered the Bible itself as a purely historical source for knowledge of
revelation that required uninhibited historical criticism and the best
speculative knowledge of the day to be rightly understood.72 Bruce’s
programmatic The Chief End of Revelation (1881) echoed Rothe’s high
estimation for the Bible as the unique and authoritative source for revelation
but likewise refused to shortcut the historical investigation of Scripture with
an appeal to a doctrine of plenary inspiration—a daring move for a FC
theologian of that day. The sundry historical strands within the complex fabric
of revelation are “all…profitable for doctrine, but none are dogmatic; all are
excellent for religious edification, but disappointing from the point of view of
scholastic theology.”73
Evangelical theology may have remained keen on Rothe and other
mediators as part and parcel of the late nineteenth-century fascination in
Britain with philosophical idealism, but Bruce, like the avant-garde
Ritschlians, was bidding a curt adieu to the mediating project even by the
1880s. Rothe rightly saw the historical nature of the revelation and the need to
interpret it with free and open mind but, finally, remained blind to its full
ramifications. In Bruce’s own parlance, mediators had not shaken themselves
free of “scholasticism”. They were rightly insisting against liberal theology on
the historical factuality of the saving acts of God but not with the historical 70 The Chief End of Revelation, 14; also Bruce, “Progress in Theology,” Catholic Presbyterian 4 (1883): 370. 71 See Ronald R. Nelson, “The Theological Development of the Young Robertson Smith,” EQ 45 (1973): 81-99; Maier, William Robertson Smith, 89-92, 104, 121-22. 72 Lauster, Prinzip und Methode, 175-84, covers the Hofmann-Rothe debate. 73 The Chief End of Revelation, 284.
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single-mindedness that was appropriate to the nature of revelation, brashly
speculating beyond the historical facts of revelation in order to achieve a
system of doctrines. This was as wrongheaded as the evangelicals’ clumsy
horticulture of Scripture. “Scholasticism” functioned for Bruce as
“Hellenization” did for the Ritschlians, namely, to encapsulate the church’s
wrong way of thinking about revelation as much as the wrong thoughts that
accrued from this error.74
To make his point he rather cruelly adduced an anecdote related to him
by friends returning from semesters in Heidelberg. Rothe, afflicted by an optic
ailment that left one eye sagging downwards, exemplifies the intrinsic
problem of mediating theology: a person with one eye cast down at history
and one eye raised to the heights of pure thought will never see straight.75
Christ cannot be found via history and philosophy but either through historical
or speculative method.76 If Bruce could not quite bring himself to commit in
theory to the view of some Ritschlians that Christ was the singular revelation
of God—if Jesus is right about his loving Father, should not the world show
some trace of him he asked in response to Herrmann’s Christomonism?77—he
functionally followed it. The historical Christ was the “perfect exegete” of the
doctrines of God, humanity, church, and redemption.78 The wedge Rothe and
others drove between Bible and revelation had prepared the distinction
between Bible and Christ that Ritschlians and theologians within their orbit
like Bruce sharpened with a jealous historical epistemology in order to evoke
the rejuvenation of Christian belief.
Hence, Bruce’s twist on the traditional Protestant appeal to Scripture
against tradition. Of course, Protestants were right to make the Bible stand
over a church whose own history shows how little it had learned from its
Lord.79 But sola Scriptura falls short of the mark. Evangelical theology must
74 Meijering, Theologische Urteile über die Dogmengeschichte, 51-59, helpfully explicates the Ritschlian understanding of Hellenization as encompassing both flawed thinking and flawed thoughts. 75 “The Apologetic Function of the Church in the Present Time,” 654. 76 Ibid., 653. 77 Bruce, “Theological Agnosticism,” AJT 1 (1897): 10-11. This position was consistent with right-wing Ritschlians like Kaftan who refused to jettison the first article of Luther’s Catechism (Lessing, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen evangelischen Theologie, 1: 84). 78 Apologetics, 501-2; also “Progress in Theology,” 373; Bruce, “The Future of Christianity,” BW 6 (1895): 255. 79 Apologetics, 514, 351-52; also “Theological Thought,” 35-36.
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return to the evangel, which is the historical Jesus. Theology always
recognized in principle Jesus and his teaching as the perfect revelation of God
but never gave it full due. Christ was always subordinated to either church or
Bible.80 Missing Jesus for the Bible has left orthodox doctrine neither inspired
or imprinted by God’s perfect revelation in Christ.81 In missing Jesus for the
Bible, Protestant theology lost its unifying centre amidst competing systems of
doctrine.82 Yet the moral connection between Christ and humankind that
sustains living faith is precisely in those gritty, humble details of his
humiliation which scholastics ancient and modern treat either as a mere
springboard to higher truths or brush past in pursuit of a rationally satisfying
account of faith. The indenture of Protestant theology—evangelical or
mediating—to scholasticism has left it impotent to effect either the
Christianizing of doctrine or the all-important distinction between first and
secondary doctrines. Only a re-centring of faith on the historical Jesus can
accomplish that, and Bruce yearned for the day when the church’s creed
would heed Jesus’ revelation of the Father.
The emphatic assertion of the great truth that God is an Ethical Being, morally simple, comprehensible in His moral nature by man made in His image, will signify the inbringing of a new spirit into theology and religion which will change the structure of creeds, brighten Christian life, and bring about the breaking down of many partition walls by which God’s people are kept apart from each other, and the fellowship of saints is rendered to a large extent a nullity.83
The time was at hand. Bruce believed that modern historical scholarship was
accomplishing nothing less than the “rediscovery of Christ,” obscured for
centuries behind the rules of legalistic piety or the speculations of scholastic
dogmas.84
A final aspect of the ellipse provides the bridge between Bruce’s
recovery of what Jesus did and said and what, as a consequence, Jesus could
now do in and say to the church, in other words, the spanning of ancient text
and contemporary doctrine. His exhortation to the church to come “to Christ’s
80 Ibid., 512, summarizing the argument of the Jena Ritschlian H. H. Wendt. 81 “Progress in Theology,” 371; The Chief End of Revelation, 289-90; Bruce, The Christian Church: its Function and the Conditions of its Future Power (Manchester: Alexander Thomson, 1883), 14-18. 82 The Chief End of Revelation, 289-90; “Progress in Theology,” 372. 83 “Progress in Theology,” 372. 84 “The Future of Christianity,” 255.
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school” and “learn of Him how to think of God, man, and their relations”85
presumed something like the Ritschlian notion of value judgement, although
he left it largely implicit. The concept of value was a heuristic device that
enabled the Ritschlian scholar to thresh historical husk from spiritual kernel.
The historical method established the objective facts of Jesus’ life and
teaching of the kingdom of God, which then received due attention in church
proclamation according to their perceived spiritual value. This is important to
make clear, for ‘back to Christ’ proponents like Bruce and Ritschl often draw
the charge of skewing the symmetry between history and ethics, reading into
the historical record Jesus’ ethical-theological proclamation of the fatherhood
of God and inestimable value of the individual human soul, all the while
touting their impartial exegesis. Even within the Ritschlian movement, the
historical study of religions school came to insist that the attempt to balance
the facts of history with the needs of the church inevitably forced present
theological interests onto what should be a purely historical account of
Christianity.
Such criticism is not quite on target. Bruce and the Ritschlians were
not historical positivists. Re-centring contemporary Christianity on the
historical Jesus and his proclamation of the kingdom was never just a matter
of following the rules of exegesis. It was always imperative to discern between
“husk” and “kernel” for historical events are not of equal value and indeed
much of the historical fact can obscure or detract from the spiritual meaning.
Harnack’s What is Christianity? should be read as an extended attempt to
smelt the gospel from the ore of first century Judaism. Similarly, Bruce
grumbled that New College’s Old Testament professor A. B. Davidson
interpreted the New Testament as “…Judaism + an infinitesimal increment”
because he lost the spirit of Christ’s intent amidst the historical details of his
Jewishness.86 In reference to Paul and with an appreciative nod to Herrmann,
Bruce argued that legitimate theology is based on the Christian experience of
the facts of history.87 The pressing need for the modern church to determine
those fundamentals upon which it can stand in catholic unity “must be settled
85 Bruce, With Open Face (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1896), 155. 86 Bruce, “The Rev. A. B. Davidson, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Hebrew in the New College, Edinburgh,” BW 8 (1896): 261. 87 “Theological Agnosticism,” 7.
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by the Christian consciousness, which, if not the test of the truth of doctrines,
is at least the test of their relative value…”88 Just as a given scriptural truth
does not entail its equal importance with other scriptural truths—the mistake
of the flat Baconian method loved of evangelicals—so too is the centre of
faith, the history of Jesus, “valued” according to its resonance with Christian
experience.89 Hoc est Christum cognoscere, beneficia eius cognoscere. This
clarification is crucial, of course, to prevent the position of Bruce and the
Ritschlians from being caricatured, but especially because it committed him to
a concept of doctrine not as the blasé mimicry of biblical expressions nor even
a confession of faith as pristine as the Lord’s Prayer (what Ritschl proposed as
a sufficient confession of faith90) but rather the careful determination of the
church of what aspects of Jesus’ witness most need to be said to its age.
[4.4.3] It is understandable, given Bruce’s professional obligations,
although nonetheless frustrating, that the progression within his thought from
establishing “the simple Christianity of Christ” via the historical critical
method to “the working out of His great thoughts”91 in the church’s doctrinal
reflection finds no crisp, comprehensive account. Moreover, despite his
protestation that “it does not suit my temper to speak oracularly,”92 the
Glasgow apologist’s “swashbuckling style” (Alan Sell) often gave his
piecemeal comments on the nature, origin, and development of church
doctrine more flash than substance. The church’s grand system of doctrines
and vast body of rituals were perjured as “Rabbinism”, “dogmatism”,
“conservatism”, and above all “scholasticism” to emphasis its vast distance
from the simple doctrines of Christ and the evangelic spirit of the New
Testament church. Indeed, so bilious was his rhetoric at times against
orthodoxy that the fundamental orthodoxy of this self-professed conservative
must be reaffirmed.93
88 “Progress in Theology,” 375. 89 The Chief End of Revelation, 289-90. 90 Ritschl, “Instruction in Religion,” 80. 91 Bruce, The Moral Order of the Universe (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1899), 399. 92 Bruce, The Providential Order of the World (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1897), 309. 93 See The Chief End of Revelation, 304-5; The Kingdom of God, 357; The Christian Church, 24.
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It also needs to be kept in mind that while his agitation for the
replacement of his denomination’s doctrinal standards did not endear him to
the Confession’s praetorians in the FC, his passion for better doctrine and an
improved confession proves that he was no friend of a broad church
ecclesiology where unity is achieved by ignoring articles of belief. Not a
creedless faith but a better creed was what the church desperately needed; it
needed to seize upon those few “theological postulates…essential to the
Christian faith, and while treating other positions as matters of comparative
indifference,” defend them “against all comers.”94 All this having been said,
once the soapbox style of his writing is stripped away and the gaps in his
thinking filled in, Bruce’s interpretation of doctrine is clear enough, if
incomplete. This section, while abstaining from any critical conclusions for
now, pieces together his views on a sequence of vexing issues: (1) the biblical
origins of doctrine; (2) the rise of church orthodoxy; (3) the problem of
development; (4) the nature of church confession.
Jesus of Nazareth revealed many things about God, humanity, and
world. Christian belief takes its cue from these facts. As such, doctrine should
be explicitly and deliberately Christocentric. The Old Testament is the
religious and historical prerequisite of Jesus, of course, but is of limited value
for the church’s doctrinal task—Jesus’ ethnic context must not obscure the
theological rupture he evoked with Judaism.95 Alternately, the New Testament
writings themselves are the diverse “fruitage of seeds dropped by the Master,”
real developments of the fact of Jesus witnessed to in the gospels that,
however profound, still stand under those facts.96 The contemporary church
forms doctrine analogous to the early church at the council of Jerusalem (Acts
15): it deliberates upon and applies the teachings and actions of Jesus to the
problems peculiar to its context.97
Bruce’s basic position on the origin of doctrine is further illuminated in
reference to its contrapuntal alternatives. There is no question of Christianity 94 “The Apologetic Function of the Church in the Present Time,” 653, in reference to the C of S’s John Tulloch. See also “The Future of Christianity,” 259; The Chief End of Revelation, 306; “Progress in Theology,” 375. 95 E.g., The Kingdom of God, 43-45; The Providential Order of the World, 147-242. 96 “Four Types of Christian Thought. IV. The Fourth Gospel,” 169. 97 Ferdinand Christian Baur, 48-51.
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without doctrine as touted by theological liberals. The prominence of
didaskalia in its founder’s ministry makes that clear, even if Jesus’ teaching
may not be always be didactic and propositional but rather parabolic and
evocative.98 There is also no question of maintaining the “doctrinaire
conception of revelation” that hallowed conservatives’ cumbersome systems
of doctrines. During a roundtable discussion on “progress in theology” in the
pages of The Catholic Presbyterian, Bruce jousted with A. A. Hodge, who a
few years before had succeeded his father in the chair of didactic theology at
Princeton.99 Hodge argued that the “mysteries of faith” (Eph. 3) were the sum
of knowledge necessary for salvation held in perpetuity by the church catholic;
they had been explicated systematically long ago as orthodoxy, and were
capable of deeper but not intrinsically different insight. This was scholasticism
pure and simple, fumed Bruce. It blatantly ignored the century’s scholarly
industry that has illumined the kaleidoscope witness of the apostles to Christ
and traced its development into the later documents of the New Testament. As
early as The Humiliation, Bruce was arguing that even the synoptic gospels
show the apostles progressing from a Socinian notion of the atonement to a
catholic approximation.100 Further, by flattening the New Testament as a sum
of doctrines, Hodge has lost the Christological centre and, therefore, cannot
keep doctrine either in living connection to Jesus of history or disciplined by
his priorities. The fact of development within the New Testament demands a
value judgment: is it a good development? Neither Paul nor John, for example,
rose to the heights of Jesus’ revelation of the Father’s universal love: the
former was limited by his strong notion of adoption into sonship, the latter by
his dualistic worldview.101
Privileging the synoptic gospels fuelled Bruce’s dissent from the
church’s habit of over-investing John with doctrinal weight. The fourth apostle
(Bruce defended Johannine authorship) makes lucid what is dim in the first
three gospels, yes, but his manner of looking at Jesus sub specie aeternitatis—
98 Bruce, “Jesus,” in Encyclopaedia Biblica, Vol. 2, ed. T. K. Cheyne and J. Sutherland Black (New York: Macmillan, 1901), 2440; also, Apologetics, 31. 99 “Progress in Theology,” 365-69. On Hodge see P. J. Wallace, “Hodge, Archibald Alexander,” BDE, 302-303. 100 Humiliation, 352; also “The Teaching of Christ in the Gospels…,” 460, 465-66. 101 “Four Types of Christian Thought. II. The Pauline Epistles,” 13; “Four Types of Christian Thought. IV. The Fourth Gospel,” 178-79.
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what could be considered the fountainhead of scholasticism—throws up such a
celestial glare that the earthy details of the Christ that sustain piety and prompt
faithful action cannot be seen.102 Similarly dangerous is the longstanding
Protestant infatuation with Paul, which Bruce frequently attacked in the
extreme form given it in the neo-Baurian Otto Pfleiderer’s widely
disseminated argument that Paul was the founder of Christianity.103 However
true it is that the church needs to develop doctrine beyond the mere fact of
Jesus’ words and deeds, it is equally true that it can never outgrow constant
recourse to those “simple, naïve questions” of its founder that disconcert its
traditions and chasten its systems of doctrines.104
Nineteenth-century theories of the development of church institution
and dogma have followed the Tübingen school in pitching battle on the field
of Urchristentum, Bruce rightly observed. His own expertise, however, kept
his attention riveted to the more limited progress from founder to the apostles,
above all in St. Paul’s Conception of Christianity (1894), where he argued
with the Ritschlians against liberals like Pfleiderer that Paul faithfully
unpacked the genius of Jesus’ key ideas.105 The marks of Harnack—whose
History of Dogma Bruce was editing at this time for publication in T. & T.
Clark’s Theological Translation Library—appear obvious if unacknowledged
in his hasty account of the sclerosis of the church in the early second century
into a dogmatic, hierarchical institution. He did not invoke the Hellenization
thesis here or anywhere else—save one solitary reference to the taint Greek
metaphysics and morals had left on the development of Christianity106—
preferring instead to damn as “scholastic” all diversion from the course
naturally plotted for church belief by the witness of the historical Jesus.
102 “Four Types of Christian Thought. IV. The Fourth Gospel,” 175, 179. 103 See especially Apologetics, 430-47. The work Bruce had in mind was Pfleiderer’s Das Urchristentum (1887). 104 “Theological Agnosticism,” 13-14; also “The Teaching of Christ in the Gospels...,” 458, 460. 105 Bruce, St. Paul’s Conception of Christianity (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1894), 362-78. The central place in the economy of salvation assigned by Paul to the church did not marginalize Jesus’ vision of the kingdom of God, for the kingdom is what the church strives after as its eschatological ideal. Nor was the essentially ethical content of Jesus’ proclamation of God’s coming rule trumped by Paul’s notion of the church as the body of Christ. As union with the Saviour was moral, Paul, unlike the catholic tradition, understood the body of Christ as a charismatic community rather than mystical institution. 106 The Providential Order of the World, 248.
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The passing remarks and intimations throughout his corpus regarding
the critical transition of church practice and belief from the apostolic to the
ante-Nicene eras were, in fact, largely concerned with the dogma of Christ.
But his desultory assessment of the catholic dogma of Christ is far from clear.
Bruce could appear wholly resigned (as Harnack also was) that the dogma of
Christ formalized at Nicaea and Chalcedon was the logically unavoidable
outcome of the early church’s belief in Jesus’ true humanity and true divinity.
It was, in some sense, a legitimate development although not without intrinsic
problems and a mischievous legacy.107 He reproved the Ritschlians for their
haste to displace Chalcedon with the simple affirmation that Jesus possesses
the value of God for the church. Is not a more sympathetic assessment of the
creedal process by which the early church sought to articulate their experience
of the Son of God’s humiliation warranted by the very facts of history and
experience that should underwrite legitimate theology?
Yet he also echoed their concern that, as Eckehard Lessing noted,
“Christology must be given an ethical-personal shape,” to the end that
“[t]raditional depictions of Christology, especially the two natures doctrine
and the satisfaction theory were rejected.”108 Some of his writings from the
1890s seemed to abandon the evangelical doctrine of the atonement he
defended earlier with no little acumen,109 and elsewhere he defended the
Ritschlians’ rejection of the catholic dogma of Christ as not only compatible
with belief in his divinity but a distinct improvement on Chalcedon. “The only
faith concerning Jesus as the Divine Lord worth professing is that which
springs out of spiritual insight into its historical basis, and is charged with
ethical significance.”110 Amidst this doubletalk on the dogma of Christ, Bruce
seemed to speak straightforwardly only to disavow the finality of the dogma of
Christ (or any dogma for that matter). As historical scholarship makes Jesus
better known, a confession of faith shall arise which, as he put it, will not
107 “Theological Agnosticism,” 13-14; The Humiliation of the Christ, 65-68. 108 Lessing, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen evangelischen Theologie, 1: 107-8. 109 See Malcolm A. Kinnear, “Scottish New Testament Scholarship and the Atonement c. 1845-1920,” (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1995), 305-14. 110 Apologetics, 404-5, 398-99; also “Four Types of Christian Thought. II. The Pauline Epistles,” 18-19.
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reunite divided Christians on the old doctrines but rather re-fuse Christians on
a new understanding of Christ and his teaching.111
Nor did Bruce equivocate about the content of the future church’s
creed. Doctrines would be biblical, of course, but not in the old sense. For the
Bible does not teach “the raw material of an elaborate creed, but rather a few
things very thoroughly.”112 The historico-critical method, by focusing the
church’s gaze on the centre of God’s revelation, Jesus and the kingdom, would
render doctrines that were explicitly Christian, that is to say, fully determined
by God’s revelation in Jesus. Especially, Bruce believed that “it is of essential
importance…that the idea of God be thoroughly Christianized.”113 Ethics
would trump dogma as Jesus’ revelation of our loving Father in heaven took
precedence over the sovereign lawgiver of the old Calvinists. And doctrine
cued to the historical Christ would give evangelical theology a much-needed
sense of proportion regarding which tenets of the church’s ancient creed need
to be spoken boldly and which can be passed over without a whisper.114 Thus,
the “sectional orthodoxy” blighting modern Christianity would give way to a
fundamental creed and a “Christian catholicity” capable of unifying believers
and commending the faith to unbelievers.115
A portentous attempt was provided in a catechism he wrote and
appended to With Open Face (308-22). “Q1: Who was Jesus? He was the Son
of Mary of Nazareth in Galilee, whose husband, Joseph, was a carpenter.” The
one hundred and twenty-two questions and answers abide tenaciously to the
synoptic narrative, with only passing references to the rest of Scripture. Jesus
is flesh and blood: a heroic healer, a religious maverick, a tender friend, a
teacher of God’s fatherly love for all. A measure of caution is needed in
drawing conclusions from the primer. The conspicuous absence of the Trinity,
Jesus’ divinity and resurrection, atonement, church, and final destiny should
be attributed to his pedagogy rather than theology—the catechism was
intended for children, who he felt were being poorly prepared for faith by the 111 The Kingdom of God, 354. 112 “The Future of Christianity,” 255. 113 Ibid., 371; also The Kingdom of God, 127. 114 “Progress in Theology,” 373. 115 “The Apologetic Function of the Church in the Present Time,” 644; also Bruce, The Galilean Gospel (Edinburgh: Macniven & Wallace, 1882), vi, 208.
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authoritarian and abstract Shorter Catechism.116 Perhaps it is best interpreted
as an initial step toward Bruce’s unfulfilled life’s task: to assist the church to
confidently confess its faith with a new creed, grounded in the ancient gospels
yet fresh and relevant, catholic and evangelical.117
Nevertheless, its starkly synoptical lineaments and absolute aversion to
speculation beyond the historical letter embodied Bruce’s conviction that
Christianity of the future would stand on a different fundament from both
classical and current orthodoxies. From the fundament of the historical Jesus
dogma was “de-parentified” with adolescent impudence. “The Church is a
mother,” retorted Bruce, “and like that of all mothers her influence is helpful
up to a certain point, and beyond that is apt to be a hindrance to spiritual
independence.”118 A truly radical reorientation to the Jesus of history rendered
futile the mere tinkering with classical doctrines or confessions by
conservatives like Rainy, even as it exposed the Hegelian-inspired
legerdemain of C of S liberals like the brothers Caird whose cross-town
lectures in the university were maintaining the old forms of dogma fully
evacuated of old meaning.119 A faith for the late nineteenth century would
need new wineskins, although the few places where Bruce intimated these
“Christianized” doctrines show them to be of such a redoubtably Ritschlian
vintage that they seem little more than the historicizing of Kant that he had
once cheekily suggested as a theological desideratum:120 Jesus revealed the
universal fatherhood of God, the dignity of humankind, the coming kingdom
of God as the reconciliation of societal and ecclesial divisions.121
The fundament of the historical Jesus also kept the history of the
church from easy collusion with theories of natural evolution or philosophical
development. This sharply distinguished Bruce’s understanding of the history
of doctrine from much prevailing theological opinion. “Hegel’s philosophy of
history and Darwin’s biological theory both started from what is empirically
116 The Kingdom of God, 352-53. 117 MacFayden, “Professor Alexander Balmain Bruce,” 97-98, remarked on Bruce’s hope to prepare a new creed. 118 Apologetics, 505; also “Progress in Theology,” 365. 119 Ibid., Apologetics, 354-55. Sell treats John Caird in D&DF, 64-88. 120 The Chief End of Revelation, 39-40. 121 See especially “Jesus,” 2435-54; The Kingdom of God, 125-46.
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successful, and argued backwards to the supposed necessity and inner right of
its appearance,” observed Karl Löwith. “Their admiration of historical and
biological forces led to an idolization of whatever force happened to be
victorious.”122 Mediating and Neo-Lutheran parties borrowed freely from both
philosophical and scientific concepts of development to chronicle the history
of dogma as a victory march (see 5.3). Not so the Ritschlians. They rejected
out of hand any theory that submerged spirit to nature or found God’s
revelatory activity outside of Christ. While this carried the consequence that
nature was effectively dropped from the enterprise of Protestant theology,123
positively, it allowed them to damn biological notions of the ascent of species
as well as speculative notions of either dialectical or organic historical
progress as false paradigms for interpreting the history of dogma, in order to
justify their belief that much doctrinal growth was malefic and in need of a
ruthless pruning back to the gospel root.124 Their perspective garnered
credibility as the twilight of Spätidealismus deepened and as the shadows cast
across the countenance of nature by the theory of natural selection left many
theologians more and more uneasy about what nature revealed of God.
Bruce’s similar concern to devolve doctrine to the historic Christ
prompted a disavowal of the easy analogy of the natural to the moral or
religious then prevalent in evangelical apologetics as part and parcel of the
‘common sense’ intuition of external reality. Several scholars have argued that
Scottish evangelicalism had been so thoroughly chastened by Hume in the
eighteenth century as neither to pay much attention to natural theology proper
nor to conflate the natural with the moral as easily as American evangelicals
did. But this line of argument is not quite convincing.125 It neglects both the
widespread influence of Bishop Butler’s famous case for the natural analogy
of religion on Victorian evangelical apologetics, and the flowering in Britain
at the century’s nadir of precisely those idealist notions of development
122 Löwith, From Hegel to Nietzsche, 219. 123 Frederick Gregory, Natural Science and the German Theological Traditions of the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1992), 201-60. 124 Max Reischle, Christentum und Entwicklungsgedanke (Leipzig: Mohr, 1898), 18-19. 125 Gauvreau, “The Empire of Evangelicalism: Varieties of Common Sense in Scotland, Canada, and the United States,” 235-38; Drummond, The Church in Late Victorian Scotland, 222-23.
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rejected by the Ritschlians.126 Bruce’s contemporary John Laidlaw (1832-
1906) was in concert with his predecessors in the chair of systematic theology
at New College, Chalmers and James Buchanan (1804-70), in arguing with
Butler that theology needed to commend itself by stressing the links between
revealed and natural religion.127 That remarkable polymath and professor of
natural science at Bruce’s own college, Henry Drummond (1851-97), made a
heady argument for the intrinsic continuity of spiritual growth and natural
evolution in Natural Law and the Spiritual World (1883) and The Ascent of
Man (1894).128 The Victorian public may have rapaciously consumed
Drummond’s baptized version of Herbert Spencer’s social-evolutionary theory
of humankind’s upward struggle to final transcendence, but Bruce had no
appetite for mixing the progress of the kingdom with the world’s evolution.
The principle, ‘natural law in the spiritual world,’ is emphatically false here. In nature the few are chosen, and the many are ruthlessly cast away; the fit survive, and unfit perish, and the unconscious cosmos sheds no tear. In the kingdom of God it is far otherwise. The chosen few seek the good of the many; the fit strive to preserve the unfit.129
For similar reasons he warned students off the Ritschlian black sheep,
Johannes Weiß (1863-1914), who kept Jesus’ proclamation of the kingdom so
implicated in the apocalyptic expectations of first century Judaism as to be
useless for present churchly needs.130 For Bruce, Jesus was absolutely
unique—not a product of the supposed laws of historical development.131
The disjuncture between natural and historical development permitted
‘back to Christ’ advocates like Bruce to argue for the church’s deliberate
regress to its historical origin without sacrificing current scientific theories of
evolution or even Victorian assumptions of cultural progress. Even if Bruce
126 Newman’s appeal to Butler’s analogy between the natural and the revealed was briefly noted in his arguement for the probability of doctrinal development given the place of development in the natural world (2.3.2). 127 John Laidlaw, “Modern Thought, Its Relation to Christianity and the Christian Church,” PR 6 (1885): 615. 128 See further James R. Moore, “Evangelicals and Evolution: Henry Drummond, Herbert Spencer and the Naturalization of the Spiritual World,” SJT 38 (1985): 383-417. 129 The Kingdom of God, 256-57. Bruce’s Gifford Lectures, however, give a heavily evolutionist reading of the history of religion: Jesus is the crown of humanity’s evolving religious sensibilities (e.g., The Moral Order of the Universe, 277-78). But this incongruity does not directly bear upon his opinions of church doctrine. 130 The Kingdom of God, 43-45, 280-84; “Jesus,” 2443. See Berthold Lannert, “Weiß, Johannes,” in RGG4 8, 1374. 131 The Kingdom of God, 46-49; “The Teaching of Christ in the Gospels…,” 456.
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did not offer an actual theory of doctrinal development as several Ritschlian
historians of dogma did, this disjuncture played a significant role nonetheless
in his critical handling of traditional church teaching. His cry of ‘back to
Christ’ sang in tune with the chorus of voices throughout the history of the
church that have sounded at once liberal and conservative, calling for a return
to an ancient foundation and a renascence of beliefs long forgotten that
promised to open a new horizon for God’s people beyond ecclesiastical
myopia. In the nineteenth century in particular, when various notions of
development were being bent to deeply conservative ends as in Newman’s
Essay, or, in a far-from-conservative history of dogma like Baur’s, still
conserving the whole dogmatic tradition as the inevitable dialectic of Spirit’s
realization, it was the “return journey” taken by Ritschl and his British peons
like Bruce that was truly liberalizing.
According to its own proponents, the historical-critical method shortcut
the historically quantitative gap—the “tragic, humiliating, disenchanting tale”
of church history132—that kept Christ distant from the church. Through the
telescope of historical research “essential Christian truth is seen with unveiled
face and open eye, and in the light of its glory the moonlight of scholasticism
pales.”133 The church need no longer peer dimly at Christ through the stained
glass window of dogma—historical study would bring it face to face with the
very fact of Jesus Christ.
Despite thunderous reproach for what he considered to be the self-
serving, often spirit-stifling safeguards for orthodoxy erected by churches—
popes and bishops, creeds and confessions—Bruce did not deny the very
notion of orthodoxy. He remained ever the Presbyterian, if a disgruntled one,
in his conviction that the church must know and confess what it believed. He
gave up on the vast span of the Westminster Confession but not on the catholic
depth contained therein; to his credit, he never mouthed the trite juxtaposition
of religion and doctrine then being bandied about by broad churchmen.
The hope of the future seems to lie neither in a creedless Church nor a Church clinging superstitiously to all traditional dogmas, but in a Church which has the will and the wisdom to distinguish between
132 The Kingdom of God, 270. 133 “Progress in Theology,” 375.
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essential and non-essential in religious belief, between catholic Christian certainties and matters of doubtful disputation; in other words, between doctrines of faith and theological dogmas.134
Yet what was merely a remote possibility for Cunningham, what was for
Rainy a perilous necessity, was seized upon by Bruce with alacrity: namely,
the contraction of orthodoxy to essential doctrines and the subsequent
shrinkage of the church’s creeds and confessions to a fundamental faith.
Divided Presbyterian churches especially needed a doctrinal standard of wider
basis and narrower focus.135
Yet upon critical analysis, it becomes clear that the theological
presuppositions Bruce brought to the task etherealized the coming church’s
confession. His explication of Jesus’ significance in broadly Kantian ethical
categories was bitter distasteful of both external forms of religion and
heteronomous authorities. This received sharp expression in his attacks on
church institution, sacrament, priestly office, as well, of course, as dogma. His
commentary on Hebrews bristles with disdain for “the sacerdotal drudge” of
the temple cult. Indeed, a pronounced anti-Jewish—even Marcionite136—
thread runs throughout his corpus that is especially apparent when he
mimicked Ritschlianism’s ethicized version of the Lutheran law-gospel
dialectic to contrast religious ritual with the kingdom of heaven “within you.”
“Bruce’s hatred of legalism is unmistakable,” noted Denney, who took over
first his mentor’s old pulpit at Broughton Ferry and then his old chair at
Glasgow, “but though his moral sense is the very strength of him, I don’t think
he appreciates sufficiently the need in his theology of this safeguard against
anomia.”137
Bruce halted at a full endorsement of the need for a concrete, i.e.,
written and church sanctioned, confession of Christ’s gospel as a form of
anomia. Surprisingly his wariness was reinforced by the Confession’s doctrine
of Scripture (see 1.2.2). It had been Robertson Smith who, from the
134 The Chief End of Revelation, 306. His emphasis. 135 “The Future of Christianity,” 255-56; “Progress in Theology,” 375-76. 136 E.g., Apologetics, 513: “Faith could live and even thrive with a very reduced New Testament: the Synoptical Gospels and Paul’s four all but universally recognized Epistles might suffice to start with.” 137 Cited in W. Robertson Nicoll, Letters of Principal James Denney to W. Robertson Nicoll: 1893-1917 (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1918), 6.
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ecclesiastical dock in the 1870s, had dusted off the old Reformed doctrine of
the testimonium spiritus sancti internum to defend his teaching of an inspired
yet errant Bible from charges of heresy. Smith’s allies at the Glasgow FC
College were particularly diligent in subsequently pursuing this tactical line,
reassuring Victorian evangelicals that they could fully confide in Scripture and
affirm the very historical criticism then undermining the well-worn biblical
“evidences” like historical factuality and authorial veracity because the Bible’s
authority was sealed in the conscience by the Spirit rather than proved to the
mind.138
Bruce invoked the inner testimony of the Spirit to plead the authority
of Scripture, to argue the integrity of the canon (amongst the growing
awareness in the late nineteenth century of the voluminous extra-canonical
Christian writings), and, finally, as the sole guarantee of the church’s
orthodoxy. But his emphasis on the inner testimony of the Spirit in guiding the
church’s discernment of the fundamentals of the faith was so pronounced that
an outer testimony of faith like a formal creed or confession became somewhat
negligible, as if it followed from the fact that if the Holy Spirit was the
church’s supreme teacher, as the Scots Confession insisted (18), his teaching
remained wholly in the realm of spirit.139
The interiorizing of the witness of the Spirit among FC progressives
was significant not only for how it impinged upon Bruce’s construal of church
confession but also for how it strikingly connects him to the broader issue (see
1.3.1) of how Protestant obsession for thoroughgoing doctrinal fidelity to the
word of God has determined their ecclesiology and church historiography. It
was noted in critique of Cunningham (see 2.6) that Protestants, having
abandoned a historiography of the visible institution of the church, were often
so hard pressed to find visible continuity of evangelical doctrine over the long
history of the church that the notion of catholic tradition was ignored or
belittled. Bruce radicalized this nexus between ecclesiology and church
138 Church history professor T. M. Lindsay, “The Doctrine of Scripture: The Reformers and the Princeton School,” The Expositor 1 (1895): 278-93, opened fire on his Princeton contemporaries’ doctrine of the inerrancy of the Bible. I did not have access to James S. Candlish, The Authority of Scripture independent of Criticism (Glasgow: Adam and Charles Black, 1877). I am indebted to James Stalker, “Testimonium Spiritus Sancti Internum,” ET 31 (1920): 246-25, for an account of this doctrine’s nineteenth-century Scottish revival. 139 Apologetics, 354. See also “Progress in Theology,” 375.
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historiography or Dogmengeschichte. When doctrine and confession are
interiorized via the Spirit the church itself practically disappears from the
world. The church’s post-apostolic “fall” has now become a vanishing act,
abetted, of course, by the audacity of the ‘back to Christ’ proponents in
thinking that the historical Jesus who is constitutive of church doctrine and
practice was only lately recovered. Bruce preferred to deal with church and
confession as ideal rather than actual—a strange discrepancy for one who
claimed single-minded attention to seek Christianity “in the world” (as
Newman put it), namely, the earthy facts of the gospel testimonies to Jesus of
Nazareth.
He made little attempt to hide his despair over the sorry state of the
church; considered against its eschatological ideal, the kingdom, it was a
paltry thing indeed. “What is the ideal Church?” he asked:
It is a body of men believing Jesus Christ to be the Son of God, with a faith not received by tradition but communicated directly by the Father in heaven to each believer. Each man for himself has clear insight into the divine worth of Jesus, passionately loves the goodness exhibited in His character, and with sincere, deep fervour reverences Him as the Lord.140
This church did not exist, nor yet did a confession of faith that was purely in
Spirit and in truth. It must be said that there is a docetic feel to Bruce’s
perspective. A skittishness to put doctrine to paper would seem to share in his
frantic suspicion of rite, sacrament, and cult; it was, finally, one and the same
as the disregard of the long tradition of the church for a shimmering ideal
whereby God communicates truth immediately and directly to the believers’
souls. Bruce’s disembodiment of church and doctrine—as evangelical
Presbyterian critics of Ritschl such as Orr wagered—left the Lord of the
church without either visible realm or witness throughout much of history.
Ironically, this resolute advocate of a historical approach to church and
doctrine ended up not very “deep in history” after all.
140 Apologetics, 504.
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4.5. Conclusion
A. B. Bruce’s rambunctious handling of church doctrine and
confession carried no coherent or comprehensive account of the origin and
development of doctrine. The FC pastor and Glasgow professor’s professional
interests rarely let him stray beyond the confines of the New Testament into
the formative periods of catholic or Protestant orthodoxy. Moreover, a
seeming inaptitude for systematic thinking and a sermonic habit of making
sweeping rather than qualified assessments left his scattered judgements on the
historical origins and development of doctrine highly tendentious and his
overall perspective on the problem of doctrine and history difficult to
determine. “I never feel that Bruce deals in a really scientific way with matters
of scholarship,” William Robertson Nicoll, editor of The British Weekly,
complained to Dods.141 Bruce’s position is important simply because of its
luminosity in the Victorian twilight of evangelicalism and its long afterglow,
especially at the popular level. “His glory is that he so profoundly affected
Christian thinking in his generation that ideas which were once original to him
seem almost commonplaces to us now,” was a just estimation made fifty years
after his death, even if the claim to originality is far from accurate.142 Bruce
was irrefragably a product of inheritance and environment. His perspective on
history and doctrine was forged in response to a perceived crisis of the
contemporary church; he leaned heavily upon an historical epistemology then
current in German theology to radicalize a particular view of Scripture and
tradition he inherited as an evangelical, and to retrench its everyday, everyman
(i.e., practical and non-speculative) ethos.
The Ritschlian accent of his critical appraisal of classical doctrine has
been highlighted with good reason. If much recent theological historiography
overlooks Ritschl, many late Victorian evangelical Presbyterians viewed him
as “the most influential, most interesting, and in some ways most inspiring, of
modern theologians.”143 Horton Harris’ hyperbolic claim that the Tübingen
school, by utterly historicizing the various theological disciplines, was “the
most important theological event in the whole history of theology from the 141 T. H. Darlow, ed., William Robertson Nicoll, Life and Letters (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1925), 133, emphasis his. Cited in Sell, D&DF, 105. 142 Stewart Mechie, Trinity College Glasgow 1856-1956 (Glasgow, n.p., 1956), 33. 143 Denney, Studies in Theology, 3.
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Reformation to the present day,” would have received at least qualified assent
with Bruce and some of his FC colleagues.144 In this new milieu, Bruce was
one of many who turned to that Tübingen turncoat, Ritschl, to help him find a
place for doctrine within the limits of history alone. Although Bruce’s
alignment with Ritschlianism was never flush, in an article on “Theological
Agnosticism” written in 1897—that it was the lead article in the inaugural
edition of the American Journal of Theology suggests something of his stature
at the end of his life—the errors of Herrmann and Harnack are deemed to be
only exaggerations.145 True, Bruce did not construct a theory of doctrinal
origins and development upon a Ritschlian blueprint, but all the requisite
blocks are present, if haphazardly: the scrupulous binding of doctrinal
statements to the facts of the history of Jesus; a highly ethicized interpretation
of Jesus’ message and life as reconstructed by historical criticism; the rise of
dogma—that is to say, the heavy-handed imposition of binding articles of
belief—as proof of the post-apostolic church’s “fall” away from Jesus’
message and the New Testament conception of faith; consequently, a critical
stance toward church tradition as a Babylonian captivity of the gospel. Similar
to members of the Ritschlian right in Germany such as Kaftan, Kattenbusch,
and Theodor Haering (1848-1928), Bruce sought not to dissolve all classical
doctrines but rather sift them and reconstitute the fundamentals through
concerted focus on the historical Jesus as the revelation of God.146
For all Bruce’s concert with the Ritschlian school, an overt
Hellenization thesis is noticeably absent in his corpus. He owns instead a
“rustication thesis”: to expel the Christian mind from the school theology that
had let belief long stray from its rustic home in first-century Palestine. This
tapped into a deep Protestant and evangelical prejudice against
“scholasticism” as the antithesis of the biblical faith—philosophical rather
than biblical, speculative rather than practical, intellectualist rather than
commonsensical, the wisdom of the world not the foolishness of the cross (see
144 Harris, The Tübingen School, xvii. E.g., Bruce, Ferdinand Christian Baur, passim; Dods, “Progress in Theology,” 31-32. 145 “Theological Agnosticism,” 7. 146 Orr, Ritschlianism and the Evangelical Faith, 9-10, remarked on the rightwing Ritschlian attitude to orthodoxy.
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1.4.5).147 That the Hellenization thesis is merely a refined variant of the anti-
scholastic polemic Bruce owed to his theological lineage permits the passing
over of his slight rustication rhetoric in favour of Harnack’s doughty argument
for the pathology of dogma that shall be addressed in the next chapter.
Whatever criticism made there of the formidable Harnack will condemn the
Scot’s straw man doubly so.
In closing, two aspects of this broadly Ritschlian perspective on
doctrine can be revisited with an eye to the wider theological contours of this
dissertation. First, it should be repeated that Bruce, like the mainstream of the
Ritschlian movement, was not reducing theology to history. Historians of
theology who (not unjustly) locate Ritschl at the fount of historicism in
Protestant theology need remember that the line from him to Troeltsch was not
arrow straight.148 When the soon-to-be defrocked Father Loisy (1857-1940)
sneered in his 1902 anti-Harnackian tract L’Evangile et l’Eglise, “Herr
Harnack appeals, above all, to facts,” he was correctly identifying
Ritschlianism as a method attuned to plain historical fact, soberly
considered.149 “Facts”, however, were not the sole tool at Harnack or Bruce’s
disposal for recovering the life and message of Jesus. That would be better
exemplified by the C of S minister and Aberdeen professor Sir William
Ramsey (1851-1939), whose archaeological research in order to prove the
historical veracity of the New Testament and interpret its contents gave him a
certain celebrity during his lifetime.150
Rather, as Troeltsch pointed out with characteristic incisiveness in his
review of Harnack’s famous Berlin lectures on the essence of Christianity, the
147 Michael Basse, “Theologiegeschichtsschreibung und Kontroverstheologie. Die Bedeutung der Scholastik für die protestantische Kirchengeschichtsschreibung,” ZKG 107 (1996): 50-71, highlights a few representatives. 148 For a careful delineation of a complex and contested term see Georg G. Iggers, “Historicism: the History and Meaning of the Term,” JHI 56 (1995): 129-152. Iggers notes that the belief that all truths were specific to particular historical contexts bred skepticism among some late nineteenth and early twentieth-century Protestant theologians toward theology’s traditional claims to truth, as well as a loss of faith in the assumed superior values of Christian civilization. 149 Alfred Loisy, The Gospel and the Church, trans. Christopher Home (New York: Scribner, 1909), 3. 150 This important development of the nineteenth century is covered by W. H. C. Frend, From Dogma to History: How our Understanding of the Early Church Developed (London: SCM, 2003).
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favouring of Urzeit as the locus of divine revelation and fulcrum for church
doctrine and praxis requires a theological, not historical, judgement, no less
then the quest to discern an essence to that revelation.151 Troeltsch’s verdict of
this Wesenbestimmung as “unhistorical” because it severed historical cause
from effect and relied on a value judgement to determine what was genuinely
Christian needs to be heeded by theological historians as substantiation that
the Ritschlian mainstream and its derivatives like Bruce were not historicists.
They maintained, if sometimes inadvertently, a crucial place for theological
judgment within the scope of historical criticism.
The recent trend among some theological conservatives from across
the ecclesiastical spectrum to advocate an unabashedly doctrinal interpretation
of the Bible as both more edifying for the church and congruent with
theology’s own nature over against the historical-critical method has much to
commend it. It is tempting to see the rancorous disagreement in the early
1920s between a youthful Barth and a tired Harnack as emblematic of the
debate over the merits of a theological or an historical approach to
Scripture;152 conservatives side with the former, of course, and derive
considerable inspiration from his dogmatic reading of the Bible and
confidence in theology’s autonomy. Yet if proponents of the theological
interpretation of Scripture fail to recognize that the Ritschlian position is not,
in fact, “merely” historical, then it becomes easy to avoid the unsettling, even
threatening theological questions posed by Ritschl, Harnack, Bruce and the
like regarding the relationship of doctrine to Scripture, the nature of dogma,
and rise and development of orthodoxy. An unapologetic claim for the
independence and uniqueness of the theological task should not grant
immunity to the church’s dogmas from the uncomfortable probing of theology
or history.
In this sense, then, I would discourage painting Bruce and the
Ritschlians as mere historical critics of church and doctrine and then pitching
them against “theological” defenders of the same. The problem with Bruce’s 151 Troeltsch, “Was heisst ‘Wesen des Christentum’? [1903]” in Gesammelte Schriften, 2: 386-451. 152 See further H. Martin Rumscheidt, Revelation and Theology: An Analysis of the Barth-Harnack Correspondence of 1923 (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1972); Thomas A. Howard, Protestant Theology and the Making of the Modern German University (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2006), 403-468.
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view of doctrine is not that it was historical rather than theological but rather
that it was inadequately theological and historical. First of all, the theological
criteria governing the historical task of the selection of doctrinal stuff were too
anthropocentric to allow Christian doctrine, i.e., the teaching and witness of
Jesus according to Bruce’s terms, to be anything more than descriptions of
human potential. Secondly, as has been already suggested, it is not that it was
too historical but rather that it only accounted for a single dimension of the
category of the historical.
Second, along with his insistence on a Christological crucible for the
church’s perennial task of forming doctrine and establishing dogma, Bruce’s
most valuable legacy for the problem of Dogmengeschichte lies in the fact that
his Ritschlian presuppositions allowed him to derail the history of the church
from the tracks of cultural progress, scientific evolution, or philosophical
development. This was no small feat in a day when many thoughtful
Christians had a “one-size-fits-all” notion of development as forward or
upward progress. Bruce’s colleague Drummond was a chief proponent of this
dogma of development.
Even more remarkable than the rapidity of its conquest is the authority with which the doctrine of development has seemed to speak to the most authoritative minds of our time. Of those who are in the front rank, of those who by their knowledge have, by common consent, the right to speak, there are scarcely any who do not in some form employ it in working and thinking.153
Drummond breezily applied the tenet of amelioration to science as the
principle of the evolution of the species, to Anglo-Saxon culture as the path of
social progress, and to Christianity as the fact of redemption in Christ. A
decade after Bruce’s death, most delegates at the epochal World Missionary
Conference in Edinburgh in 1910 held out giddy hopes for the evangelizing
cum civilizing of the world in their lifetime.154 With a few exceptions Bruce
rejected the hegemonizing Victorian dogma of development. Unless the
Christian historiography of church and doctrine respects the diverse manner of
providence, it will invariably be seduced by antecedents of philosophy,
153 Henry Drummond, The Ascent of Man, 9th ed. (New York: James Pott & Co., 1899), 7-8. 154 Brian Stanley, The World Missionary Conference, Edinburgh 1910 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2009), especially 205-247.
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biology, geology, or sociology that obstruct a truly open, inductive
investigation of the origins and development of doctrine.
In effect, Bruce called the church to let the dead bury the dead. There
can be no doubt that the freedom his perspective wins for the study of the rise
and development of doctrine comes with a cost—as a recent Ritschlian
wagered: “Free inductive theology demythologizes tradition and
demythologizes church.”155 The rise of orthodoxy cannot be justified through
philosophical dialectic or natural selection, nor should dogma, creed, or
confession be assumed as the inevitable flowering of the seed of the gospel.
The challenge posed by the church’s history has to be faced without recourse
to the security provided either by a presumption of determined development
or, along the lines of the question lately asked by Jürgen Moltmann, by a
determining authority: “Do we really want with Dietrich Bonhoeffer ‘to come
of age’, or shall we again be childlike and immature and take shelter in the
protective mantel of Mother Church and Father State?”156 In the Ritschlian
template, the study of the history of doctrine becomes a platform for hard
questions about the church’s past speech and courageous choices regarding the
church’s future message.
But now we turn to another Presbyterian voice in Glasgow, James Orr,
whose abiding concern for doctrinal continuity and equally strong belief that
orthodoxy “progressed” in the history of the church precisely as its Lord
intended, takes us back to a confident historical idealism and robust
traditionalism perhaps more suited to the religious world of the mid nineteenth
century than to its anxious conclusion.
155 Zahl, A Short Systematic Theology, 86. 156 Jürgen Moltmann, “Protestantismus als ‘Religion der Freiheit’,” in Religion der Freiheit: Protestantismus in der Moderne, ed. Jürgen Moltmann (München: Kaiser, 1990), 11. Might Bruce’s harsh words for Mother church and his plea for doctrine to reflect the ‘grown-up’ judgement of the church reflect the phenomenon of ‘muscular Christianity’? Social historians have long analysed the conjoining of piety or religiosity with femininity that occurred within the rise of evangelicalism and, more recently, the reaction it called forth in the later Victorian period as certain Protestant circles challenged the feminisation of Christianity—albeit from within the matrix of a traditional understanding of gender—on its own turf of congregation and home, by exhorting men to a larger participation in “manly” activities in the life of the church and a more consequent “fatherly” presence in the life of the family (see the documentation in Callum Brown, The Death of Christian Britain, 2nd ed. [London: Routledge, 2009], 58-114). The possibility that the widespread discontent with traditional doctrine in the late Victorian era reflected the feminine-disparaging rhetoric of ‘muscular Christianity’ has escaped the notice of scholars of Victorian religion, likely because most prefer to probe religion as a cultural rather than theological matter.
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Chapter 5
James Orr: the Logic of the History of Dogma
“I myself have a certain weakness for Hegel, and always like to do some ‘Hegeling’.”
- Karl Barth1 5.1. Introduction
In marking F. C. Baur’s tardy arrival in Britain, Bruce wryly remarked:
“For it takes Continental waves of thought well-nigh a generation to reach our
British shores.”2 Such a ‘generation gap’ is illustrated perhaps nowhere better
than with absolute idealism. Its Untergang in its native land of Germany was
largely complete when it loomed up in the twilight of Victorian Britain to cast
a fleeting glow across the religious spectrum, from the sonorous Lux Mundi of
the Anglo-Catholics to the faddish New Theology (1907) of the liberal
Congregationalist R. J. Campbell to the many evangelicals on both sides of the
Atlantic who continued to parry or praise speculative divines like Rothe and
Isaak Dorner (1809–84) as if oblivious to the Ritschlian surge that was
washing away the ideal of Vermittlung in German theology.3
This peculiarity of nineteenth-century Protestant thought directly
implicates the UP/UFC theologian James Orr. Orr earned his laurels as a
staunch defender of evangelical orthodoxy at the time of its ebbing. An
accomplished theologian whose erudition was always up-to-date, his arsenal
was still drawn to a large extent from the German theology of the previous
generation as well as the late Victorian flourishing of Hegel in his hometown
of Glasgow. Dorner was Orr’s favourite theologian. As Barth tells the story,
when Dorner’s mature A System of Christian Doctrine was published in 1879-
80:
1 Cited in Eberhard Busch, Karl Barths Lebenslauf (Munich: Chr. Kaiser, 1986), 402. 2 Bruce, Ferdinand Christian Baur, 3. 3 See Sell, The Philosophy of Religion, 1875-1980, 1-31; Peter Hinchliff, God and History: Aspects of British Theology, 1875-1914 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1992), 99-222; George Hendry, “Theological Evaluations of Hegel,” SJT 34 (1981): especially 339-41.
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[H]e had been anticipated by six years by Albrecht Ritschl, thirteen years his junior, whose work on Justification and Reconciliation, free of metaphysics, did more justice to the change in the times, so that from the start Dorner’s book had to fight against a prejudiced view that it was old-fashioned and out-of-date…. [T]he name of Dorner, whose learning and powers of thought were so often revered, became covered with a thick layer of dust soon after his death.4 It would seem that T. & T. Clark was translating Dorner too rapidly to
allow any dust to settle upon his name across the North Sea. Orr owed a
particular debt to this mediating divine as he updated evangelical orthodoxy as
a “Christian view of God and the world as centring upon the incarnation.”5
Against its fin de siècle detractors, Orr commended Christianity as the
worldview that alone was able to harmonize the claims of experience, the facts
of history and science, and rational truth. It was his abiding conviction in the
unity of God’s truth that made him turn on Ritschl with vehemence. Kant may
have let the Ritschlians carve a nook for faith safe from its critics but at the
insuperable cost of a coherent theological interpretation of the world. Orr
upheld instead a quintessentially mediating ideal: Christianity is “really the
higher truth which is the synthesis and completion of all the others,—the view
which, rejecting the error, takes up the vitalising elements in all other systems
and religions, and unites them into a living organism, with Christ as head.” He
drew a resolutely conservative conclusion from this: if every part of the
organism were integral then the doctrinal reduction for which many in his day
were clamouring would be fatally injurious to Christianity.6
A key plank in Orr’s presentation of Christian truth as an indissoluble
organism was a case for Christian belief as having taken root, grown, and
blossomed according to divine determination. His argumentation drew deeply
upon the late Victorian interest in idealism as well as evangelicalism’s
ongoing interaction with an older generation of German theologians whose
idealist philosophical commitments served conservative theological
programmes. The Progress of Dogma (1901) should be classified as a species
4 Barth, PT, 564. 5 See Glen G. Scorgie, A Call for Continuity: The Theological Contribution of James Orr (Macon: Mercer UP, 1988), 48, 50-51, 97, 111, 125, 155 notes Orr’s dependence upon Dorner. 6 Orr, The Christian View of God and the World (1893; reprint, Vancouver: Regent College P, 2001), 11-12, 16.
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of nineteenth-century histories of dogma that wed an idealist philosophy of
history to orthodox theology.7 As noted earlier, dogma-dissolving liberals
were not the only theologians to enjoy what Barth called “Hegeling” (see 1.
3.3)!8 Neo-Lutherans, mediating theologians, even a Catholic Tübingen
School that flowered at mid-century,9 variously drew upon the romantic
fascination with organic growth and the idealist teaching of the realization of
the divine immanence in history to defend traditional church teaching. Orr’s
PD is the superlative British specimen of conservative “Hegeling” in the field
of Dogmengeschichte. It would seem from its typical appraisal as pellucid and
learned but peculiar and simplistic, however, that its interpreters do not
appreciate its genus if, in fact, they recognize it.10
This presents a problem. Philosophical assumptions about history
shape the handling of the raw material of history. Consider by way of example
how the English translation of Bernhard Lohse’s widely read A Short History
of Doctrine obscures his argument for Die Epochen der Dogmengeschichte.
Anglo-American theology squirms at what the conservative Lutheran Lohse
can assume throughout his work on account of idealism’s residue in German
intellectual life, namely, that ideas or events in history are the unfolding of
Spirit. “Hegeling” is a byword for flights of dangerous if not heretical
speculation among the conservative Anglo-American theological tradition to
which Orr’s best interpreters belong. Yet an idealist conception of history is
precisely what determines Orr’s solution to the disquieting question posed to
Protestants most recently by Newman’s Essay: Who judges the fact of
dogmatic development in the absence of an external authority (magisterium)
or consensus regarding its formal authority (Scripture)? Classifying PD under
the genus of theological “Hegeling”, then, aims to show it a specimen of
impressive pedigree and widespread dissemination (if only on the other side of
the Channel), the merits and demerits of which, as the Lohse example
7 Orr, The Progress of Dogma (1901; reprint, Vancouver: Regent College P, 2000). Hereafter abbreviated as PD. All references to this book will be made within the text. 8 In this sense ‘Hegeling’ refers less specifically to Hegel than to idealism in general. 9 See Donald Dietrich and Michael J. Himes, ed., The Legacy of the Tübingen School: The Relevance of Nineteenth-Century Theology for the Twenty-First Century (New York: Crossroad, 1997). 10 E.g. Toon, Development of Doctrine in the Church, 69-70; Steven L. Oldham, “Alister E. McGrath and Evangelical Theories of Doctrinal Development,” (PhD diss., Baylor University, 2000), 44-52, 167-72; Scorgie, A Call for Continuity, 75-78; Sell, DD&F, 145-46.
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suggests, can only be evaluated by recognizing its philosophical
presuppositions. To this end, following a biographical sketch of Orr, three
German examples of such “Hegeling” for conservative theological ends will
be presented, not to try to prove PD’s dependence upon any one of them but
rather to draw out the characteristics of this genus of Dogmengeschichte to
enable a more fair analysis of Orr’s argument than has previously appeared.
5.2. James Orr (1844-1913)11 That Orr came to be known as a theological pugilist of the first order is
perhaps not surprising. He was a born fighter. Orphaned in Glasgow as a child
and apprenticed to a bookbinder out of economic necessity, he knew the
struggle of the lower classes swelling the tenements of the ‘second city of the
Empire’. But his UP pastor, impressed by his young congregant’s obvious
intellectual aptitude and Christian zeal, actively guided him into university to
prepare for ministry. Entering Glasgow University at the late age of twenty-
one, Orr took up studies in a philosophy faculty in tumult. He looked above all
to John Veitch (1824-94), fighting with his back against the wall as one of the
last Scotch common sense philosophers. Hegelianism was on the ascent, and
he heard it passionately expounded by Edward Caird (1835-1908) to throngs
of enthusiastic students. This period left him standing firm on a mixed
fundament “of Hegelian confidence in reason and the older Scottish reliance
on irrepressible common sense” that had profound repercussions on his
theological thinking.12
No less eclectic were his divinity studies. He started at the UP Divinity
Hall in 1868. Its professors embodied the mild Calvinism and ardent piety
typical of their tradition, but, with the exception of John Cairns, were not
distinguished by scholarly prowess. The same could not be said of Caird’s
brother, John, professor of divinity at Glasgow, who was raising eyebrows by
using Hegel to renew the old C of S moderatism. Prize money enabled Orr to
11 On Orr see David Bebbington, “Orr, James (1844–1913),” ODNB (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2004), [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/41222, accessed 16 June 2009]; Sell, D&DF, 137-171; J. I. Packer, “On from Orr: The Cultural Crisis, Rational Realism, and Incarnational Ontology,” Crux 32 (1996): 12-26; above all the superb study by Scorgie, A Call for Continuity. 12 Scorgie, A Call for Continuity, 67.
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spend two stimulating years in the faculty of divinity, graduating in 1872 with
the B.D. and wrapping up denominational studies shortly thereafter.
Called to a UP congregation in the Borders in 1874 and married the
very same year, church and family occupied his attention for the next
seventeen years, although he earned a doctorate in divinity (by examination)
from Glasgow in 1885. It is noteworthy how early he had to reckon with the
historical conditionality of doctrine as a concrete problem: despite his
inexperience, he was appointed in 1877 to the church committee charged with
the weighty question of the need to revise the venerable Confession. The
resulting 1879 UP Declaratory Act clarified those Calvinist doctrines that were
most vexing to Victorians so as to assure of the universality of God’s love and
Christ’s atoning sacrifice and insist upon liberty of opinion for matters not
entering into “the substance of faith.”13 Orr’s subsequent career as a broadly
“heritage” rather than a strictly “confessional” theologian stands in obvious
congruency with the decision made then by his denomination to refocus on
catholic and evangelical fundamentals rather than Reformed peculiarities.
An academic career was assured when his 1891 Kerr Lectures on The
Christian View of God and the World was published to wide acclaim. Fifty
years later, John Dickie judged it the most able systematic theology published
in Britain in the second half of the century.14 That same year he was appointed
to the chair of church history at the UP Divinity Hall. If this were not the most
fitting seat for him, it would give him the expertise needed to oppose
Ritschlianism at the very place where they pitched battle against orthodoxy:
early Christianity and the history of dogma. Over the course of the 1890s he
came to earn an international reputation as an authority on this rising German
school, publishing widely and lecturing internationally.15 When the UPs and
the FC united in 1900, he was shifted to the chair in systematic theology and
apologetics at the new UFC College in Glasgow. With James Denney, George
13 “Declaratory Act of the United Presbyterian Synod (Adopted May 1879),” in Corpus Confessionum, 800-802. See further Hamilton, The Erosion of Calvinist Orthodoxy, 156-89. 14 Dickie, Fifty Years of British Theology, 103-4. 15 Later published as PD and Neglected Factors in the Study of Early Christianity (1899; reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2006). Also dating from his period are his classroom lectures: The Early Church, Its History and Literature, 2nd ed. (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1903).
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Adam Smith, and Thomas Lindsay alongside Orr, it was probably the premier
theological school in the English-speaking world in the early 1900s.16
If Orr looked like one of his denomination’s liberal ‘young guns’ in the
1870s and 80s, anxious to move beyond the Confession to a more generous
catholic Presbyterianism, in this period his tone hardened as he sensed the task
of doctrinal reformulation amongst Victorian Protestants spinning out of
control. He struck back at threats to essential doctrines from evolutionary
science and philosophical naturalism, and disputed the more radical claims of
the historical critics of Scripture.17 As other scholars began to ignore his
arguments as antiquated, he made his plea for theological continuity and
conservation on the lecture and Bible conference circuit in Britain and North
America, pitching his publications for popular consumption. In this vein,
shortly before he died in 1913 he contributed several articles to The
Fundamentals, a venture sponsored by a California millionaire to galvanize
Nicene orthodoxy against the accelerating pressure for doctrinal
reconstruction.18
5.3. “Hegeling” and Dogmengeschichte: Three German Examples
[5.3.1] A decade before Baur wrote his famous Dogmengeschichte, a
precocious Theodor Kliefoth (1810-95) published an Introduction to the
History of Dogma (1839).19 The similarities between the two trailblazing
historians of dogma are striking. With one foot in Schleiermacher’s
understanding of doctrine as the church’s original and ongoing expression of 16 Best, “The Study of New Testament in Glasgow from the Disruption to the Great War,” 38. 17 E.g., God’s Image in Man and its Defacement in Light of Modern Denials (1905; reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 1997); The Problem of the Old Testament Considered with Reference to Recent Criticism (London: James Nisbet, 1906); The Virgin Birth of Christ (1907; reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2007). 18 Orr was no ‘fundamentalist’, however. His thought would later spur the neo-evangelicals of the mid-twentieth century to move beyond the cramped mentality of fundamentalism toward the mind of the church catholic, as well as a tentative openness to evolution and Biblical criticism. See Gary Dorrien, The Remaking of Evangelical Theology (Louisville: WJK, 1998), 44-63, 118-119. 19 Theodor Kliefoth, Einleitung in die Dogmengeschichte (Parchim: Hinstorff und Ludwigslust, 1839). Page references will be given within the text. On neo-Lutheran histories of dogma see Kantzenbach, ED, 153-64; Martin Grahl, “Verklärung—Die Konzeption der Heilsgeschichte bei Theodor Kliefoth,” (DTheol diss., Universität Rostock, 2002); Beyschlag, Die Erlanger Theologie, 93-98; Steck, “Dogma und Dogmengeschichte in der Theologie des 19. Jahrhunderts,” 50-54.
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its consciousness of God in Christ, and the other foot in Hegel’s Philosophy of
History (7), Kliefoth and Baur could walk away from yesteryear’s historians
of dogma who disdained their subject matter as a jumble of antagonistic
theological opinions that had progressively corrupted the religion of Jesus.
Those rationalists and neologists simply failed to understand the true nature of
the church as “an organic development out of one principle and into one living
movement…” (365). The one principle palpitating through the development of
the church and its doctrine is the union of the human and divine in Jesus
Christ. The history of the church is a progressive incarnation of God in which
“the Spirit of Christ takes form in human individuals and their deeds,” forming
a single divine-human organism from disparate parts (14).
If Schleiermacher was correct to treat the church’s doctrine as
Glaubenslehren rather than the didactic propositions of the older orthodoxy or
the timeless religious maxims of the rationalists, Kliefoth, like Baur, was not
content to rest in the realm of the subjective. Drawing upon Hegel’s
epistemology, which concretized human action and thinking as “acts” of
Mind, he claimed dogmas as the very acts of the Spirit of Christ who indwells
the church and compels it to conceptualize and articulate its knowledge of its
holy essence (3-4, 81, 297, 301); the history of dogma was accordingly
defined as “a line of acts of the human spirit to scientifically depict the
Christian truth” (299). Kliefoth also insisted as Baur later would that the
church’s divine-human constitution imparted a real “humanity” to dogma: the
“process of realization” (81) of the truth it held was long and agonized;
sharply antithetical opinions and vicious ecclesiastical divisions all figured
into the genesis of dogma (57-59).
Despite treading a common path through Hegel and Schleiermacher,
Baur’s and Kliefoth’s goals markedly diverged. Kliefoth’s “Hegeling” served
an intolerant Lutheran confessionalism that he propagated with great influence
for half a century as church superintendent in the grand duchy of
Mecklenburg. The following programmatic statement on dogma shows him
tweaking the Hegelian dialectic just enough to maintain dogma as finally
inviolable: “It is the one, eternal, unchanging Christian truth that takes
scientific form [wissenschaftliche Gestalt] in dogma. But this process is
mediated through the activity of human individuals. Filled with the Spirit of
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Christ, possessed by its truth, its confessors must grasp and speak out their
faith, their life—even in a scientific way—as dogma…” (297). The economy
of redemption—what the Protestant Orthodox coined the ‘order of salvation’
[ordo salutis]—presupposes God as object, the human as subject, and the need
for the latter to appropriate the salvation held out by the former through
personal faith and word and sacrament. Analogously, the formation of dogma
in the church presupposes the objective facts of salvation history, its reception
by humankind in Scripture and tradition, and its further scientific
appropriation and practical application in the life of the church (9). But
Kliefoth, unlike Hegel and Baur, maintained that only the subject was properly
historical. That the object, God, was not in historical process ensured an
interpretation of dogma as the realization of the organic consequences of an
unchanging truth over the history of the church rather than the realization of
Truth itself in the history of the church.
The realization as dogma of the church’s spiritual life was plotted as an
eighteen hundred yearlong appropriation of the ordo salutis. In four
circumscribed dogma cycles [Dogmenkreisen] the object of salvation (God)
was appropriated (dogma) by the subject of salvation (church) and
progressively unfolded in its theology, liturgy, and ethics (12, 21, 57-59). A
dependence upon Hegel’s “geographical history” is obvious.20 First, the Greek
penchant for speculative thought transformed Jehovah into the triune God and
plumbed the mystery of the God-man Jesus Christ (65-70). The practical, legal
mind of the Romans was suited to then develop the Christian understanding of
humanity (70-9) in light of the doctrine of God. After the barrenness of
medieval theology, the profound spiritual intensity of the German Reformers
achieved a dogma of salvation by synthesising the dogmas of God and sin (82-
7). God was charging Kliefoth’s own century with the dogma of the church,
leading its best theological minds to the categories of the organic and the
incarnational with their embrace of growth and development, the infinite in the
finite, and the reconciliation of seeming opposites in a higher unity (87-99).
Kliefoth took his own counsel to heart by writing influentially on the genius of
confessional Lutheran ecclesiology.
20 See G. W. F. Hegel, The Philosophy of History, trans. John Sibree (New York: Dover, 1956), 79-102.
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[5.3.2] A student in Berlin of Hegel and Schleiermacher, Gottfried
Thomasius (1802-75) was a leading light of the Erlangen school along with
Hofmann and one of several neo-Lutherans inspired by Kliefoth’s Einleitung
to track the divine progress of dogma more deliberately into its climax in the
Book of Concord, yet according to the historical standards Baur had
established in the meantime. Thomasius is remembered today more as a
pioneer of kenotic Christology than for his learned History of Christian
Dogma (1874-76).21 But the chief problem motivating kenotic theories in this
era—specifically, to reconcile a classical Christology “from above” with
respect for the real humanity of Jesus—was precisely what pressed him to
investigate Dogmengeschichte as a divine act under genuinely human
conditions. Christianity was not the “ripe fruit nor the opened up blossoms of
the old world” (as Baur argued); in the theological jargon of the Erlangen
school, Thomasius insisted instead that Christianity owed its existence to a
supernatural act [Tat] of God, namely “the reality [Tatsache] of the
incarnation of God” (1-2). And yet since the “new life” is fleshed in the
human subject through spiritual rebirth and the ministrations of word and
sacrament, dogma unfolds through and under the normal conditions of history
as the Spirit compels the church to penetrate ever more deeply into the
experience of faith (3-6).
As much as the full humanity of the church’s historical context needs
to be respected by the historian of dogma, the genesis and development of
dogma should be equally appraised as a work of God (6-11, 13; also 20-24).
Thomasius took over Kliefoth’s scheme of Dogmenkreisen except to give
Anselm the objective side of the dogma of salvation and let the Reformers
unfold the subjective side (justification) by virtue of the deep Innerlichkeit of
the Germans.22 The nineteenth century is again predestined for the dogma of
the church. If Thomasius gave greater play than Kliefoth to a dialectic method
of unmediated unity, opposition, and mediation in the development of dogma,
he made very clear that dialectic was methodological and not ontological as
21 Thomasius, Die christliche Dogmengeschichte als Entwicklungsgeschichte des kirchlichen Lehrbegriffs, Vol. 1 (Erlangen: A. Deichert 1874). Page references will be given within the text. 22 The same thought is found in Hegel, Philosophy of History, 420.
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with Hegel.23 And if he agreed with Kliefoth that the nature of organic
development precluded the obsolescence of dogmas, it was typical of an
“Erlangener” to admit that the genius of those older symbols might not abide
in the letter—Thomasius’s kenotic speculation, in fact, was his attempt to
unfold the true meaning of the Christological definitions pronounced at
Chalcedon and Augsburg.
[5.3.3] The Berlin Systematiker Isaak Dorner (1809–84)24 embodied
the nineteenth-century German Protestant ideal of mediation: a devoted
churchman and daring thinker, in the pious depths and soaring speculations of
his mind the clefts between infinite and finite, the ideal and the historical,
Lutheran and Reformed, were overcome. The unifying centre to which all
contraries craved was the God-man Jesus Christ. For like his neo-Lutheran
contemporaries, Dorner made the incarnation the fundament of history and
thought, secular or sacred. Colossians 2:3 (“In whom are hid all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge”) hung over his desk as the key to the universe. It
was his mediation of religious experience and systematic thinking to serve an
explicitly Christological theology that piqued Victorian evangelicals’ attention
and held it for so long. He sought above all to reinvigorate ancient Christology
by modifying it through the modern axiom that the “the divine and the human
conspire towards unity”—an ambitious project enabled by a bold synthesizing
of Schleiermacher and Hegel.25 The former had valiantly broken with the
intellectual dogmatism of Protestant orthodoxy to locate faith in the
experience of God mediated through Christ, but in doing so effectively
obliterated the object of faith by collapsing it into the consciousness of the
church community.26 Yet “Christianity refuses to stay in the antechamber of
23 Compare Thomasius, Die christliche Dogmengeschichte, 14-18, to Kliefoth, Einleitung, 31-38. 24 On the mediating theology see Michael Murrmann-Kahl, “Vermittlungstheologie,” in TRE 34, 730-737. On Dorner see Barth, PT, 563-73; Welch, Protestant Thought, 1:273-82; Kantzenbach, ED, 130-41. 25 Dorner, History of the Development of the Doctrine of the Person of Christ, Vol. 1, trans. W. L. Alexander and David W. Simon, rev. ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1872), 2. Page references will be given within the text. 26 Dorner, A System of Christian Doctrine, Vol. 1, trans. Alfred Cave (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1880), 17-19.
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the spirit.”27 Faith aspires to intellectual certainty of the grounds upon which it
rests and real assurance of the hope within. Precisely here can the latter’s
insistence on the rational apprehension of objective revelation help by leading
the religious a priori through the rigour of speculation into hypostatic union as
a single “organism of truth” (3, 83-84).
This means that the fullness of truth possessed by the church in the
experience of Christ and the witness of the Scriptures needs to be objectified.
So even as Dorner parroted his era’s routine criticism of the Protestant
Orthodox for defining Christianity as dogma rather than as a living organism,
the genesis and development of a system of doctrine is a necessary,
progressive realization of the church’s consciousness of the faith, a “ripening”
of the divine-human organism through the normal processes of history (48, 74-
75). Indeed, if the church’s pistis did not attain gnosis as dogma it would be in
effect a docetic heresy (82).
Dorner’s interpretation of dogma through the sweeping processes of
world history rather than the narrower confines of salvation or church history
provides a clear predicate of “Hegeling”. Deeply influenced by the
seventeenth-century German mystic and neo-Platonist, Jakob Böhme (1575-
1624), Dorner followed Hegel and Schelling’s panentheistic teaching that
incarnation in history was necessary to God’s being because absoluteness must
include the finite. As such, God’s creation needs to be “consubstantiated” to
become complete (2). A “spark of life” in each person longs to be Godlike
even as it wishes to encounter God in the concreteness of the human and
earthly; every religion—from Hebrew law to Hindu monism to Hellenic
theogonies—yearns for that which only Christianity fully knows: the God-
man. But the history of religion is its own judgement—none could attain what
it craved (5-45). Dorner is careful to make clear that the incarnation of God in
Jesus Christ was not an avatar or a specific instance of a generic truth, as he
saw Hegel teaching. It is a new fact in history through which these world
processes alone can be understood (45, 75-76). But world history was a real
praeparatio evangelica, positively and negatively, for the incarnation of the
Son of God; even as, after the fact of Jesus Christ, world history draws
27 Dorner, A System of Christian Doctrine, Vol. 2, trans. J. S. Banks (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1881), 284.
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increasingly together in Christ toward the full eschatological union of the
divine and human, which is the destiny God intended for creation even apart
from sin (47).
As a consequence, pre-Christian religious ideas, especially Jewish and
Greek, “did not immediately vanish with the advent of Christianity, but
exercised the most marked influence on the Christian Church” (10). Indeed,
those critics of dogma who read the ample parallels between the church’s
dogmas and empire’s religions as the corruption of the former by the latter
miss the essence of Christianity as a world-historical act of God; absolute
idealists like Hegel who treat the historical incarnation merely as a supreme
example of a universal idea fail to see the union of God and humankind in
Jesus Christ as the new fact in which those world processes alone have
meaning (47, 74). Dorner found it wholly fitting, then, that in the origin and
development of dogma “the elements of truth, elsewhere here and there to be
met with in a scattered form or a disfigured guise, come together in unity,—a
unity which, as it personally appeared in the God-man, so in the course of
history ever more and more rises upon the consciousness of mankind” (3).
[5.3.4] These Dogmengeschichten are children of common parentage.
Schleiermacher provided the traits of religious experience, Christianity as
“life”, and Christocentricism. Yet absolute idealism effected a mutation. This
genus followed Schleiermacher in understanding doctrine as the church’s
disciplined reflection in the Spirit on the common experience of salvation
(even when they now recovered Scripture’s traditional place of authority) but
insisted on religious consciousness becoming objectified as institution,
worship, and dogma. That this process spanned the ages only shows the
vitality of the organism of the church in realizing the depths of revelation.
They tamed the more wild connotations of exuberance and unpredictability
tangled up with the romantic catchphrase of Christianity as a life or organism,
focusing instead on the regular laws of growth and the organic coherence of
all aspects of the church’s “life”. And by grafting the idealist tenet that “the
history of the World…has constituted the rational necessary course of the
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World-Spirit”28 onto this notion of organism, they saw the development of
dogma growing on a logical timetable.
Finally, this genus owed the exact expression of its Christocentricism
to Hegel’s daring use of the doctrine of the incarnation to variously explain
historical processes at work in church and world (even as they sought to
correct his overly ideal understanding of incarnation with greater emphasis on
the historical fact). If every aspect of the church’s existence was analogous to
the union of the finite and infinite, the divine and human, in its head Jesus
Christ, the “humanity’” of the dogma was granted to be an integral part of the
church’s divine-human essence, even to the extent of embracing vast world
processes as part of the formation of dogma.
This genus—Orr included—begs the question: Is it finally possible to
distinguish the divine and the human natures of dogma? Note the structural
similarity between Christology proper and Dogmengeschichte that “Hegeling”
made possible. Thomasius and Dorner were among their generation’s stoutest
defenders of classical Christology against the charge that it belittled the
humanity of Jesus. The former pioneered the doctrine of divine kenosis; the
latter, unhappy with the implications of kenotic theories for the doctrine of the
Trinity, proposed instead an innovative “progressive incarnation”. Yet their
sensitivity to the widespread rumblings of discontent with the two-natures
dogma did not lead them to jettison either a Christology from above or the
Lutheran understanding of the communicatio idiomatum. Analogously, then,
no matter how authentically “human” was the genesis of dogma it remained
fully permeated and controlled by the divine Logos. This holds even for the
least confessional of the three examples, Dorner. His doctrine of the
progressive incarnation held that the uniting of God and humanity began at the
birth of Jesus and progressively expanded as the divine Logos absorbed and
transformed every new moment and experience of normal human development
and, conversely, as the human capax infiniti itself heightened and deepened.
The same notes of the progressive, inevitable growth of a human organism
fully penetrated by the divine are struck in his definition of the history of
dogmas as showing “how the objective testimony concerning Christ, given for
28 Hegel, The Philosophy of History, 10. My emphasis.
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all times, is, in the entire fullness of all its elements, more and more disclosed
to the consciousness of the Church in virtue of her work, conducted by the
Holy Ghost” (47-8; see also 82).
True, the representatives of this genus disavowed the divinizing of the
church and professed to hold themselves aloof from the tendency in
Schleiermacher to equate the “spirit of the community” with the Holy Spirit.
Frankly, however, fusing Lutheran Christology with an idealist philosophy of
history seems to unavoidably consubstantiate whatever it touches. Does
raising the prospect of dogmatic revision raise Nestorius from the grave?
Furthermore, if “fallenness” is not predicated of the human nature of Christ in
the classical Christology, given the structural similarity in this genus between
incarnation and church historiography, what role could sin play in the
development of dogma? A final dimension of the question raised above relates
to Jesus. These neo-Lutheran and mediating historians of dogma theologized
through the template of the incarnation without particularly close attention to
the actual record of the incarnation, i.e., the gospels.29 This discrepancy
became blatant once the Ritschlian revolution had called into question the
possibility of an ‘incarnational paradigm’ for the history of dogma by
contesting the very dogma of the incarnation. How would Orr’s history of
dogma maintain the Christological shape of history beloved by the “Hegeling”
theologians of a previous generation in the face of his own era’s ringing call to
go back to the Jesus of history?
5.4. The Progress of Dogma [5.4.1] Like other members of his theological genus, Orr was speaking
up in PD for “the great heritage of truth which has come down to us from the
past…and is embodied as the expression of our faith in the historical creeds on
which our Churches rest…” (4). The first lecture (1-32) finds him taking a
stand on Ephesians 4:1: “Till we attain unto the unity of faith, and of the
knowledge of the Son of God, unto a full-grown man, unto the measure of the
stature of the fullness of Christ.” Against those whose anti-supernaturalism led
them to disallow doctrine entirely because real “knowledge of the Son of God”
29 See Brown’s conclusions in Jesus, 254, 274.
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was simply unattainable, Orr declared his confidence in a true revelation from
God contained in the Bible, the truth of which the church has possessed from
the beginning and will “unfold in the connection of its parts, and in relation to
advancing knowledge” until the very end (5-8, 11-13, 32). While holding fast
to the belief that Scripture contained a “sum of truths” that provided the
church with doctrine, Orr did not consider doctrine to be contained in
revelation exclusively as propositions. Like Rainy, whom he referenced (see
3.3.5), Orr held doctrine to be the “work of the human spirit operating on the
matter furnished to faith in divine revelation…” The history of revelation
contained in Scripture itself prompts or suggests the formation of doctrine
from its stories, events, and teachings. The church then settles and sets apart
those truths most vital to its life as creedal dogma (8-9; also 25-6).30
His confidence did not extend merely to the fact of divine revelation.
PD was trained not on those who doubted revelation or who decried dogma as
a hindrance to “the unity of the faith” but those who doubted that revelation
supported orthodoxy. Against the latter, especially those who charged that the
church sprouted to a “full-grown” faith on Greek rather than gospel soil, Orr
set a unfashionable thesis: like any true scientific discovery, the “fullness of
Christ” revealed in Scripture had been legitimately ascertained by a long,
public process of trial and error; the end result is housed in the central dogmas
of the Protestant confessions as a largely inviolable possession (8-11, 18).
But how to defend this great heritage of truth? Scripture, of course, is
the ultimate test of dogma: what finds no explicit place therein is not part of
“the ground and pillar” of faith (1 Tim. 3.15). This criterion cuts out much
Roman dogma and modernist Protestant doctrine. Yet the bellicose Biblicism
of Cunningham and other evangelicals was firmly rejected. Appeals to
Scripture cannot be divorced from growing insight into the organic unity and
coherence of its contents—and that depends on the very dogmatic heritage the
appeal to sola scriptura is supposed to test (15). Secondary tests like the
30 See PD, 11-14, for his distinction between theology, doctrine, and dogma. Pelikan, Historical Theology, 189, erred in judging him to have kept doctrine out of the New Testament proper. On the other hand, Oldham errs in thinking Orr’s concern to defend systematic theology as a “science” was proof that he, like Hodge or Warfield, believed that revelation was primarily propositional and could be gathered from Scripture and classified accordingly. Orr’s rhetoric of the “science of theology” has to do with the objective process of trial and error over the history of the church’s appropriation of revelation.
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organic coherence of dogmas, their echo in the Christian heart, and their
ethical vibrancy are valuable but not sufficiently objective (16). The criterion
that most closely approaches absolute objectivity is “the rigorous, impartial,
one might almost say, if sufficient time is given, the practically unerring
verdict of history” (17). The history of dogma is its tribunal: accidents of
locality will be purged, defects will be corrected, new horizons will be opened,
and errors, once cast off, will remain dead. “In history things get beaten out to
their true issues.”31
Orr intended PD as a lean and limpid argument for an immanent law of
history at work in the body of Christ over its nineteen hundred year life,
steadily bringing it to full knowledge of the mind of Christ (9). He was one
with Harnack in seizing upon history as Protestantism’s sword and buckler
against its modern despisers. And both agreed that the history of dogma is the
judgement of dogma. The similarities stop here. It was a considerable
understatement when Orr committed his lecture series “to combat certain of
the positions of that brilliant author” (vi). Truly, not “certain details” but the
very category of the historical was under dispute.32
Harnack saw the church’s hope in listening anew to the voice of the
historical Jesus muffled under centuries of church dogma. Reared in a Dorpat
(Tartu, Estonia) home and university steeped in neo-Lutheranism, he turned
his back on the doughty historical justifications of Kliefoth, Thomasius, and
his own father for confessional Protestantism. “The method of explaining
everything wherever possible by the ‘impulse of dogma to unfold itself’, must
be given up as unscientific, just as all empty abstractions whatsoever must be
given up as scholastic and mythological. Dogma has had its history in the
individual living man and nowhere else.”33 For Orr, history commended Christ
not by isolating him from broad and deep movements of history or the grand
questions of his cosmological and metaphysical significance but by showing
how all reality finds its ground and goal in him. Christ could be extracted from
the history of salvation that had commenced in the Old Testament, found 31 The Christian View, 42-43. 32 In Neglected Factors, 163, he owns his approach to the history of Christianity as “a counter-theory” to Harnack. See too “Professor Harnack on Christ and His Gospel,” in Ritschlianism, 115-148. 33 Harnack, History of Dogma, 1: 12. Theodosius Harnack was a well-known neo-Lutheran professor.
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climax ‘in the fullness of time’ in the first-century Roman Empire—it was no
coincidence after all “that…the world-empire and the world-religion came into
being together”34—and has continued through the long history of the church
only at risk of compromising Christianity as a worldview, a comprehensive
account of the universe as a rational and unified organism. As Orr said in
another context: “Light is cast on the true genius of a system by the cause of
its historical development.”35
Significantly, then, even at risk of appearing old-fashioned, Orr openly
identified with the category of the historical that governed Baur and his era of
Dogmengeschichtsschreibung and Neander and his era of
Kirchengeschichtsschreibung rather than with the Ritschlian historiography of
dogma (vi) (see 1.3.3).36 History is spiritual. The outstanding achievement of
church historiography in the nineteenth century was to understand church
history and world history as one movement of Spirit. History as a work of
Spirit logically calibrates the course of the history of dogma: “history of
dogma...is simply the system of theology spread out through the centuries”
(21-22, 30). Orr invested great importance in the fact that the logical order of
the vast majority of accredited textbooks of theology corresponds to the
church’s temporal determination of dogma (23). This sequence of
prolegomena, theology, anthropology, Christology, soteriology, and
eschatology provides the backbone of PD. Despite this blatant similarity with
Kliefoth and Thomasius, Orr thought himself to have stumbled upon the
discovery of the “exactitude of the parallel” between the logical and the
historical (24)! The belief that Spirit knits together all persons and events into
one diversified organism will also allow him to turn the Hellenization thesis
on its head. For not only is the endosmosis of the church’s environment on the
Christian organism perfectly legitimate, the reverse process needs to be
34 The Early Church, 1. 35 The Ritschlian Theology and the Evangelical Faith, 182. 36 Orr does not interact with one of the classic histories of dogma of this era, the Berlin neo-Lutheran Reinhold Seeberg’s Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte, 3rd ed., 1913-23 [ET: Text-Book of the History of Doctrines, trans. Charles Hay (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1952-61], a work of similar ethos and argument to PD, albeit of far greater volume. See the detailed analysis in Michael Basse, Die dogmengeschichtlichen Konzeptionen Adolph von Harnacks und Reinhold Seebergs (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2001).
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recognized: God used the church to penetrate the social structures, overwhelm
the intellectual schools, and answer the deepest longings of its age.37
Second, history is an evolutionary process. Like most evangelicals at
this time Orr was not opposed to evolution. In PD his appropriation of
evolutionary concepts was enthusiastic and thoroughgoing. The Lamarckian
keynote of environment as the crucible for shaping species nicely supports his
anti-Hellenization thesis. Dogma formed as the gospel warred with alien ideas,
took captive the truest insights of its competitors, and quenched the spiritual
thirst of its age (25, 28). Darwin’s theory of natural selection finds even
sharper application. The church’s life, like that of any biological organism, is
not one of violent rupture but continuous and cumulative growth according to
an inner determinism. If world history is one unified movement of Spirit then
every sphere of creaturely reality becomes a theatre for the survival of the
fittest (18-19). If, as Darwin theorized, biological natural selection always
eliminates intermediaries, i.e., false-steps, half-measures, regressive
tendencies, then the history of dogma will yield “instead of fatuity and error,
the gradual evolution and vindication of a system of truth” (30). Theological
natural selection inevitably crowns only those beliefs that vitalize the
organism of the church while irretrievably condemning one-sided or
inadequate doctrines.
Darwin will not only help Orr graft Protestantism onto the main stem
of the developing Christian organism, with semi-Pelagian Rome as a stagnant
or tainted appendage (26-7, 32, 75, 143), he will let him damn as
“unscientific” those pushing for doctrinal reconstruction in the name of
progress or pleading to give old heresies a second hearing (30-31).
Orthodoxy’s tooth and claw coronation over its foes alone coheres with the
fact of the evolution of an organism as a continuous and rational process of
natural selection.
Finally, Orr’s understanding of history was quietly infused by
Christology. The dogma of the person of Christ wields nowhere near the
structuring clout in PD that it does for other specimens in this genus. Where it
37 Neglected Factors, 15-16. This work, along with “The Factors in the Expansion of the Christian Church,” complements the historiographical claims in PD. Note too “Christianity, II. Historical and Doctrinal,” ISBE 1: 624-28.
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did shape his category of the historical was through eschatology. In The
Christian View Orr had linked his ‘incarnational worldview’ to the emphasis
among divines like Schleiermacher and Dorner on the teleological nature of
Christianity. “The highest type of ‘Weltanschauung’ is that which seeks to
grasp the unity of the world through the conception of an end or aim,” he
argued. As the teleological religion par excellence Christianity points people
to the true unity and purpose in life: the gathering up of all things in heaven
and on earth in Christ.38 Regrettably, Orr only drew a few limited pastoral and
apologetic applications from this profound thought in reference to classical
doctrine. Likewise, in PD he never expounds how eschatology, Christology,
and the history of dogma fit together except by way of sowing a few
stimulating—and problematic—suggestions in his final lecture. There, his
concern to bind together sacred and secular historical processes as one
movement of Spirit toward the eschatological supremacy of Christ is explicit
if not fully explicated in reference to specific dogmas. Further, the brash
confidence of this “Hegeling” genus regarding their own century’s proximity
to the end of the development of dogma finds reflection in the final lecture,
where Orr looked back at the whole organism of dogma in light of its end,
Christ, and forward to the twentieth century to furnish that one outstanding
dogma: the last things (29-30).
The various strands of Orr’s view of history together form one
immanent law of history. This law drives its argument for a confident progress
of dogma even as it discloses an eminently nineteenth-century concern with
theological authority and religious certainty. “The days are past when we can
appeal, with the early Church, to fresh apostolic tradition; we refuse to bow,
with the Middle Ages, to decisions of councils and canonists; we repudiate the
Romanist assumption of an infallible head of the Church; we decline, with the
rationalist, to submit everything to the rule of natural reason” (14). Orr’s
sensitivity to the religious disorientation of the late Victorian Protestantism,
his criticism of the Roman doctrine of papal infallibility (160, 200) and
sceptical appraisal of Newman’s seven tests for development as too general to
prove the logic of the development of dogma (20-21), as well as his awareness
38 The Christian View, 322-23.
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of the limits of sola scriptura hoist a remarkable burden onto the “immanent
law of the actual history” to assure “the great decisive landmarks in theology”
are fixed and tethered to evangelical Protestantism (20, 32).
[5.4.2] “The history of dogma, rightly understood, is but the working
out of the solution of what belongs to the essential content of Christianity,”
stated Orr (35). Before this essence could be dogmatically distilled its
religious fundament needed to be established. Prolegomena logically precedes
a system of truth. This was accomplished during the great age of Christian
apologetics in the second and third centuries: Tatian, Justin, Irenaeus,
Athenagoras, Melito of Sardis, and Tertullian. In his second lecture (35-70)39
Orr did not spring directly from the New Testament to Nicaea as did the Neo-
Lutherans’ Dogmenkreisen, which either skirted the apologists or read them
into the later controversies over God and Christ.40 Rather, he figured them into
the logical-historical progress of dogma precisely as apologists, commissioned
by providence to ready the soil needed to grow the organism of Christian
doctrine: “natural theology, apologetics, canonics, the ideas of religion and
revelation, and the historicity of the Christian facts” (25). In defending the
church against malicious attacks from Jewish adversaries, the apologists
clarified Christian beliefs on the relation of the Old to the New Testament, the
supremacy of divine revelation in Christ and the factualness of his death and
resurrection, as well as the life to come; against ill-founded accusations of
atheism from pagan critics, the apologists showed how “the broad truths that
underlie all religion” on the possibility of revelation, the unity and spirituality
of God, his benevolent creation and government of the world, and the moral
freedom and responsibility of humankind find their best and most beautiful
form in Jesus Christ (24, 44-54). Such argumentation not only deflected the
slander of enemies, it declaimed the universal significance of Christ to the
sprawling empire’s spiritual seekers.
Against the internal danger posed by Gnosticism, the apologists made a
crucial contribution to the nature of Christian authority by identifying a
39 See also The Early Church, 39-92. 40 However, the contemporary Erlanger Karlmann Beyschlag’s Grundriss der Dogmengeschichte values this era for establishing the “pre-dogmatic norms” like canon, revelation, etc…
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“consentient testimony” to the apostolic witness that was contained in the
Scriptures, corroborated in the rule of faith, and ensured by proper church
authorities. If Orr’s evangelicalism let him treat this triad in descending order,
and his Presbyterianism made him slight the notion of an apostolic succession
through bishops, he enthusiastically valued this era for establishing the
prolegomena necessary for a fides catholica et apostolica (54-68). As such, he
was emphatically taking issue with Harnack over the worth of the apologists
(35, 48-49, 63). This was no antiquarian spat but a disagreement over the very
essence of Christianity. They both agreed that the theological synthesis
achieved in the second and third centuries was the prolegomena to dogma—
but was it an aberrant development that contemporary Protestantism should
categorically disown?
[5.4.3] Harnack’s masterful account of the history of dogma hinges on
the second-century crossroads of Jewish and Gentile Christianity. In this era
the church embarked down the road away from Jerusalem to Athens.41 Jesus’
first followers, being mostly Jews, worshipped him as the Messiah who had
witnessed in word and deed to the revelation of God as Father and his coming
salvation. Their Lord’s “glad message of the government of the world, and of
every soul by the almighty and holy God, the Father and Judge” and summons
to become “rulers in a heavenly kingdom in contrast with the kingdom of this
world…which will be sensibly realized in a future aeon just about to appear”
was relived and renewed in word and supper as they gathered together in
community.42 Fixated on the earthy facts of Jesus, the earliest church had little
interest in flying off to the supernal heights of his divine person: their
Christology was “adoptionist”, their theology ethical and eschatological.43
And if these first Christians struggled to grasp the universalistic scope and
radically spiritual rather than theocratic content of Jesus’ revelation of the
41 I have found these studies very useful: E. P. Meijering, Die Hellenisierung des Christentums im Urteil Adolph von Harnacks (Amsterdam: North Holland Publishing, 1985); especially Basse, Die dogmengeschichtlichen Konzeptionen Adolph von Harnacks und Reinhold Seebergs. Key passages for Harnack are Justin’s Apology 1.53 and Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, 18, 46-48. 42 History of Dogma, 1: 58-60. 43 History of Dogma, 1: 60, 167.
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Father’s kingdom, their own Jewish background at least provided a context for
comprehension.
The Gentile influx into the second-century church, however, diluted
this comprehension, including the potency of Paul’s understanding of the
rupture Jesus had invoked with Judaism. The church clung onto the Old
Testament as a valuable source for establishing Christianity’s antiquity and
divine origin—but its yeast of legalism could not be contained. Christ’s
exhortations became framed as a “new law” enjoined on the new Israel. Law
was entering by the church’s back door as these converts carted through the
front door all the religious paraphernalia of the Hellenic Judaism that had been
the halfway house to Christianity for many of them, including what was for
Harnack the most important step ever taken in the history of Christian
doctrine: Philo’s Logos philosophy. Apologists began to explain the person
and work of Jesus Christ to their contemporaries through the speculative
concept of the eternal Logos, shifting away the focus of Christology from the
history of Jesus to the metaphysical state of the pre-existent and then ascended
Son of God.44
In effect, the church of this era patently failed to grasp the profound
Pauline maxim that Christ was a stumbling block to the Jews and foolishness
to the Greeks (1 Cor. 1:3). By arguing against the Gentiles that Christ was the
new philosophy and against the Jews that Christ was the new law, apologists
like Justin replaced the historical and eschatological coordinates of early
Christianity with a philosophical religion and legalistic church. Dogma carried
for Harnack the double force of speculative theological thought combined with
juridical submission to the church (see 4.3.1).45 Christ became a new Moses
who enjoined obedience to the laws of natural religion. The living experience
of Jesus on the hearts of the faithful was replaced by articles of belief about a
God-man that owed more to the metaphysical Logos than the Jesus of history.
Inclusion in the Christian community due to shared belief in Jesus became
inclusion in the church based on correct belief about him. Thus sits Justin at
the headwaters of Catholicism. He was the one who wrote the prolegomena to
every system of dogma, for he looked for salvation not in the coming kingdom
44 History of Dogma, 1: 99-114. 167; History of Dogma, 2: 169-230. 45 History of Dogma, 1:7.
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of God but in the present church, merited according to unimpeachable conduct
and impeccable knowledge.46
Harnack conceded that aspects of this development were probably
inevitable. The church’s death-match with heresy demanded a faith that was
philosophically credible and secured by the centripetal authorities of tradition
and conformity. Hence, by the second century a triplex of supposedly
apostolic norms came to be insisted upon: office, Scripture, and rule of faith.
These knelled the death of the enthusiastic worship, egalitarian leadership, and
fluidity of belief characteristic of apostolic Christianity, and buried its
practical and historical orientation to Jesus and eschatological hope in the
kingdom.47 Inevitable perhaps, but by no means indelible. By retracing the
fateful missteps taken in these early centuries, Harnack hoped to right the
wrong direction taken by the apologists.
Orr owned up to the stain on the church’s development left by the
unhealthy intellectualism and moralism of some apologists (52-3, 69).48 But he
conceded nothing to Harnack’s damning verdict of the second-century
church’s fatal misstep from the Temple to the Acropolis. Their attention to
“the fundamental articles of religion” rather than specifically Christian
doctrines was in keeping with their aim: to convince outsiders of particular
truths under dispute.49 But did they really believe nothing beyond the scope of
their treatises (49-51)? Even Justin, the very figure excoriated by Harnack for
having added a mere Christian veneer to natural religion, was convinced of
Christianity as revealed truth from God, in accord with but not dependent
upon reason (39, 44-54). As all truth derives from the Word, God’s revelation
in Christ transforms and renews whatever truth it encounters in the world at
large. “The creation of the world, e.g., is connected with the Logos who
46 History of Dogma, 2: 223-24. Hence his provocation that the only Gentile Christian in the second century who understood Paul was Marcion (History of Dogma, 1: 76-89). Harnack’s interpretation of Marcion was prepared by his earlier rehabilitation by Neander. See Gerhard May, “‘Ein ächter Protestant’: Markion in der Sicht August Neanders,” in Frömmigkeit unter den Bedingungen der Neuzeit: Festschrift für Gustav Adolf Benrath zum 70. Geburtstag, ed. Reiner Braun and Wolf-Friedrich Schäufele (Darmstadt: Verlag der Hessischen Kirchengeschichtlichen Vereinigung, 2001), 261-266. 47 History of Dogma 1: 28, 39, 45, 131. 48 Compare to The Early Church, 39-52. 49 Harnack admitted as much: History of Dogma, 2: 169.
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historically became incarnate in Jesus Christ; the doctrine of immortality is
associated with the resurrection, and with Christian hopes; there is a
judgement, but it is Christ who judges, etc” (53).
In the Alexandrian school the tint of philosophy is admittedly heavy.
But it is much harder to spot blots of Hellenism on the pages of Irenaeus or
Tertullian (69). Further, Harnack’s claim that Gnosticism was a fast-tracked
form of the same Hellenization process that was ruining the church cannot be
sustained (55, 61-2). That Orr took the apologists’ claim to a faithful
conservation—an important word in the Scots’ theological vocabulary— of
the truth once delivered through canon, creed, and bishop with much less
suspicion than did Harnack let him pry apart orthodoxy’s modus operandi of
faithful continuity of tradition based on revelation from Gnosticism’s acute
theologizing from rational first principles (64-68).
It is crucial to observe that Orr was not simply quibbling with Harnack
over the extent of Hellenization in the formation of early Christian doctrine.
He wished also to legitimize Hellenization as proof of the church’s vitality and
of the transformative power of the gospel, albeit balanced by the
Christianization of every stratum of the church’s world. To do so required
some earnest “Hegeling” in order to underscore the unity of history in the
Spirit and the finite’s inherent receptivity to the divine. Imperial Rome’s
spiritual hunger, intellectual curiosity, and moral chaos showed it was
“longing for redemption,” argued Orr, similar to Dorner. Christianity
inevitably marched to victory because the human condition was, is, and
always will be primed for Christ (42-44). As the gospel began to leaven
society, it absorbed and transformed all that was good and true even as it
agitated other religions and philosophies. So of course Gnosticism bore some
resemblance to Christianity—it had to adjust itself to the waxing church.50 Of
course the pre-Nicene apologists presented the gospel as a new philosophy.
The second and third centuries were a golden age of philosophy: Vespasian
had made philosophers hirelings of the state; Marcus Aurelius consummated
the ideal of a philosopher-king. Why would the church, which was penetrating
50 Orr was following Baur’s interpretation of Gnosticism as proof of the internal power of Christianity in the empire during this era (56). See also Neglected Factors, 186-97 and The Early Church, 1-13.
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even the highest literary and intellectual circles, not garb itself in the
philosopher’s mantle so as to express the gospel (36-37)? Of course second-
century homiletics rang like the philosophers’ tradition of rhetorical
declaiming. But is it not plausible, asked Orr, that the empire’s intellectuals
were agitated to refine their craft by those true philosophers like Justin who
were not shy to preach the gospel on Mars Hill (48)?
Assessments of PD often point out that it cannot really be considered a
point-for-point rebuttal of Harnack’s extensive reconstruction of early church
history. Perhaps it would be more fair to realize that, although the basic points
of a counter-theory to the Hellenization thesis are raised in this lecture to spill
out over the next lectures, Orr did not always have to dispute Harnack fact for
fact.51 By shifting the category of the historical, he took over (with
qualifications) Harnack’s quiver of arguments for dogma as the growth of the
gospel on the soil of the Greeks to evidence the gospel’s “mighty internal
force of assimilation.”52 And that is the proof of life of any living organism.
[5.4.4] With the prolegomena in place, the development of dogma
could begin in earnest. In the third and fourth lectures (73-131), Orr
recapitulated the church’s long answer through the third and fourth centuries
to the first question to which its mind was turned: the Godhead. Dogmatic
closure was achieved at the close of the fourth century in the Nicene-
Constantinopolitan formula of the full and equal divinity of the Son and the
Spirit with the Father.53 The correlation between logical order and historical
sequence coursed through this epoch as a Ketzergeschichte. Heresy rudely
awakened the church’s mind to know what it had always believed about God
(73, 75).
First, the Monarchian controversy pressed the church to clarify how it
conceived of God’s essence and unity. Without having a perfect doctrine at
hand, the church knew it could not countenance solutions that emphasised the
divine monarchia at the expense of their age old worship of Christ as divine,
51 This complaint forgets that PD “was not intended for proficients, but for learners…” (vi), as well as the fact that it strictly focused only on those developments that directly touched the progress of dogma (e.g. 111). 52 Neglected Factors, 217. 53 See also The Christian View, 259-84.
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or secured the full divinity of Christ through a “modalist” understanding of
God’s being (88-102). Then, Arius’ contention that “there was a time when the
Son was not” forced the church to probe the Son’s divinity in relation to the
Father. The Arian controversy became the judgement of history on two
incompatible doctrines percolating amongst the orthodox like Origen in the
third century that simply had to collide at some point: the Son’s eternal
generation and identity of essence with God but—in order to protect the divine
unity—his subordination to the Father. The bitter conflict was eventually
resolved at the two great councils of the fourth century, Nicaea (325) and
Constantinople (381), in the sole solution that satisfied logic and the needs of
Christian experience, namely, that Jesus Christ was “very God of very God,
begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father” (112-14, 117-24).
The “circle of Trinitarian doctrine” could only be completed as a sequel to the
Arian controversy. The church embraced the full divinity and personality of
the Spirit as a corollary of its belief in the homoousion of the Son with the
Father, condemning Macedonius’s false pneumatology along with semi-
Arianism in 381 (124-31).
Orr plotted a prolonged dialectic of truth and falsehood—or better yet,
half-truth and half-truth—as necessary for the church to “think out” the Trinity
(105). That this evolving, often anguished deliberation terminated in the
correct decision is sure because history is the judgement of God. Orr tellingly
classified heresies as the losers of a divinely determined process of natural
selection: the Nazarenes were “cut off from the great developing body of
Gentile Christianity, and cramped by their environment…” until they became
extinct; the Ebionites suffered from “arrested development” and died off by
the fifth century (75); the Arians began with a high view of Christ, but the
logic of their position entailed a regress toward a base Unitarianism (117).
Logical error was likened to biological degeneracy and even conflated with
moral dissipation! Paul of Samosata was immoral and irreligious (99-100);
Arius was crafty and vain (108); Macedonius was violent and unscrupulous
(128).54
54 “The noble Athanasius,” however, “sought to conquer by argument, by persuasion, not by violence” (120-21). On the contrary!—see Rowan Williams, “Athanasius,” in RGG4 1, 870-73.
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The fact of ‘the survival of the fittest’ did not consecrate every facet of
the progress of dogma, however. Against the widespread interpretation “which
makes the majority of the Council belong to the Semi-Arian party, and
supposes that it was the Emperor’s will that forced on them the acceptance of
the homoousion formula,” Orr thought that the majority of bishops realized as
the council progressed that Athanasius was waging for the essence of faith,
and decided accordingly (117-19). Why would Orr exclude political
machinations from the triumph of orthodoxy at Nicaea if world history is a
divine process? It appears that his secessionist inheritance was qualifying his
philosophy of history—the baneful interference of the state in what had been a
“voluntary” church is repeatedly castigated (106, 120; also 196, 198).55 The
theologians of Erastian Germany could fuse state and church in the process of
dogmatic development but not a good UP churchman!
In contrast to Harnack, who had become entangled in controversy in
Germany over his support of a pastor who had removed the Apostles Creed
from his congregation’s baptismal liturgy—the so-called Schrempf Case—the
early church creeds remained for Orr the indelible foundation of the Christian
dogma of God.56 As such, he countered Harnack at every twist and turn of the
path of orthodox theologizing on God. The apologists and early theologians’
high Christology (what Harnack considered speculative) found its origin in the
Logos doctrine of John, not Philo, and the cosmic Christ of Paul, not Plato.
Orr agreed with Dorner that Justin and the apologists’ ultimate interest was not
speculative and cosmological as Harnack charged but “the Logos incarnate;
from this they moved back, with the New Testament, to the connection of the
Logos or Son with creation” (74, 76-87, 123-24). The connection between
cosmology and Christ needs to be underlined because it hints at Orr’s positive
understanding of the Hellenization of Christian belief. In a throwaway line
(directed at the Ritschlians) on the worth of the Alexandrian apologists, he
linked the logos Christology to history in such a way that legitimated the use
of philosophical concepts in the genesis of the dogma of the Trinity. “With all
55 See also The Early Church, 123-28. 56 Compare Orr, “Apostles Creed, The,” in ISBE 1, 204-206, to Harnack, “The Apostles Creed: An Historical Account with an Introduction and Postscript,” in H. Martin Rumscheidt, ed., Adolph von Harnack: Liberal Theology at its Height (London: Collins Liturgical, 1988), 299-303.
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its faults, I venture to think that the Alexandrian school had an ideal we do
well to cherish, and bore witness to a truth of no slight importance, viz., that
Christianity is the principle of transformation for all our humanity” (84). As
the gospel penetrated its Greco-Roman environment, the church came to own
and transformed all vestiges of the Logos in pagan philosophy in order to
articulate its traditional belief in God as Father, Son, and Spirit. This
fermentation may have been messy but, ultimately, it enabled a doctrine of
God to develop that faithfully conserved the church’s traditional belief in God
and resisted its complete subjugation by Hellenic philosophy.57
In analyzing the Council of Constantinople’s anathematizing of the
Macedonians’ denial of the Spirit’s deity, Orr convincingly argued for its
essentially relational rather than philosophical expression (130). Harnack’s
Hellenization thesis is yet again deemed generally unsustainable. Perhaps the
real issue at this juncture in his argument, however, is whether the Council’s
statement on the Spirit really completed the dogma of God in the sense that
Orr’s argument needs. We today would not be as hasty as a Victorian
evangelical to gloss over the controversial insertion of the filioque clause at
the Synod of Toledo in 589 (130-31). Is the dogma of the Spirit complete
without resolution between the western and eastern branches of the church on
this Trinitarian issue? And what of the widespread realization among latter
day theologians that the Spirit has been the neglected member of the Trinity?
It might have sufficed for Orr to appeal to the ongoing—even
delayed—realization of a dogmatic symbol in the life and thought of the
church. This is what others in his genus of Dogmengeschichte did and in fact
what he does with other dogmas in the final lecture. Then the dogma of the
Spirit could benefit from the debates between Joachim of Fiore and the
Dominicans in the thirteenth century or Luther and the Schwärmer in the
sixteenth, etc. But his concern to synchronize the historical and the logical
made him overeager to settle the dogma of the Spirit rather prematurely in the
fourth century.
57 E.g., the “relative Greek influence” in Origen’s impressive doctrine of God hindered a satisfactory account of the equality of the Son and Spirit with the Father.
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[5.4.5] The genius of Greek theology, wagered Orr, was its rapt
attention to the metaphysics of the Godhead. Yet baffling questions arise when
Christians begin to reflect upon themselves coram deo, questions which in
many ways are more vital because they touch the will and heart. “It is plain
that these questions could not be satisfactorily investigated till the general
doctrine of God had been firmly established—that, in logical order, they come
later than it. It is equally plain that till they had been raised, no satisfactory
progress could be made with either Christology or Soteriology.” In the fifth
century “the hour had come” for the church’s determination of a dogma of
humanity. On the ready ground of the Latin church, whose mindset was
distinguished from the Greeks by its less speculative and more practical
character, providence planted two great adversaries, Augustine and Pelagius,
to debate the human person as created and fallen (136-37).
The fifth lecture (133-70) largely concerned itself with Augustine as
the architect of Christian anthropology. The disparate and often superficial
thoughts of the fathers on original sin, the terrible bondage of the will, and the
need of divine assistance, were gathered up by Augustine and transformed into
a marvellously complete system of thought, vivified throughout by his own
pathos of sin and grace (138). The great African’s doctrine of predestination
remains problematic (162-70) but its diluted alternative, the so-called semi-
Pelagianism, utterly lacks logical integrity and was, accordingly, condemned
at the Council of Orange in 529 (143, 160-62). There is, moreover, a
“churchly side” of Augustine, marred by Cyprian’s ecclesiology as well as the
inherited doctrine of baptismal regeneration, which threatened the coherence
of his thought (141-45). It has nourished Rome’s tacit semi-Pelagianism. Yet
Augustine’s theology of humanity remains a “vast, epoch-making effort”
(138), the “doctrinal side” of which is Protestantism’s rightful inheritance.
Augustine was not Newman. “[W]e should greatly mistake,” opined
Orr, “that it was subjection to an external authority, and not inner experience,
and irresistible conviction of the truth itself, which really decided Augustine to
become a Christian, or gave his theology its distinctive colour” (142).
Ecclesiastical authority could not give him what he worked out through his
own spiritual turmoil and theological brilliance, and then gave back to the
church as a dogmatic achievement for the ages. This appeal to religious
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experience will later provide a crucial link in Orr’s wider argument for the
organic continuity of Protestantism with the early church. By locating the
essence of dogma in the record of Scripture and the church’s primal
experience of God and salvation rather than the letter of its formulations about
God and salvation, Orr can argue that the “best aspects” of Augustine were not
swallowed up by the semi-Pelagian medieval church but sustained the great
theologians—Bede, Anselm, Bernard, Aquinas, Bradwardine (162)—until the
Protestant Reformers properly balanced the spirit and the letter of this dogma.
[5.4.6] The sixth lecture (171-206) offers a lucid summary of the
Christological debates of the early church up to and including the great
ecumenical councils of the fifth, sixth, and eight centuries.58 Christology could
be approached via soteriology, as Anselm attempted. Logically fitting,
however, was the actual approach via the doctrine of God, after the fourth
century controversies had established the essential oneness of the Son and
Spirit with the Father but without probing how the union of the divine and
human in the person of the Redeemer was to be conceived. The theological
acrimony, political posturing, and even physical violence of this epoch should
not distract from the “real logic of the movement” as it did for urbane
rationalists of an earlier era like Gibbon. For the dogma of Christ could only
have been attained through a tempest of discernment, as solutions were
debated, discarded, or retained (173-75). This epoch climaxed in the definition
of the person of Christ offered by the Council of Chalcedon in 451. Like
Harnack (whom Orr considered inconsistent on this point), Orr considered the
dogmatic symbol’s greater theological affinity with the Antiochian than
Alexandrian party proof that the church was not giving a philosophical
rationale of the incarnation but conserving its traditional belief in the mystery
of God-in-Christ (177, 190, 193). But that Orr held the Chalcedonian symbol
to be enduring again faced him against Harnack on the dogma that he
considered his generation’s supreme battleground.59
58 Compare to Orr’s treatment of the doctrine of the incarnation in The Christian View, 215-57. 59 Orr, “Some Recent Developments in Criticism and Theology,” PTR 5 (1907): 180.
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In tracing the logic of history through the church’s development of the
dogma of Christ, Orr again gave significant rein to a methodological dialectic.
Each failed attempt to hold together the divine and the human natures in a
single historical person had “its providential place and side of truth” to
contribute to the final dogma (178-79, 183). Apollinarianism defaulted into
docetism because it replaced the rational soul of Jesus with the divine Logos.
The ineradicable truth it protected was that the Logos “did not stand apart
from man, as something foreign to his essence, but is rather Himself the
archetype of humanity—has the potency of humanity eternally within
Himself”—a step toward recognition of the “inward kindredness of God to the
human soul” only achieved in the nineteenth century (180-81). The views of
Nestorius in the fifth century, which logically followed the church’s
condemnation of Apollinarius in the fourth century, discriminated between the
distinct natures of Christ but at forfeit of real incarnation for a mere
conjunction of the divine and the human in Christ (187-88). He was rightly
condemned at the Council of Ephesus in 431. The slogan “of one nature of the
Logos incarnate” popular with Cyril of Alexandria’s triumphant party was
used recklessly by Eutyches and others to absorb the human into the divine
(189-94). The church’s mind could not rest with this option either.
Accordingly, a new council was convened in Chalcedon in 451 to resolve the
question of Christology. As with the dogma of the Trinity, Orr insisted the
dogma of Christ was not secured through the worldly “straws” of rivalry
between churchmen or patriarchies or the growing veneration for Mary as
theotokos but according to “the trend of theological development” that needed
a dialectic of one-sided truths championed by Alexandria and Antioch to find
resolution in a definition of the person of Christ as possessing two natures
without mixture, confusion, division, or separation (182).
The development of Christology does indeed lend itself well to the
heuristic deployment of a methodological dialectic. A less convincing aspect
of Orr’s argumentation is his artificial connection of the debate over the true
humanity of Christ to the dogma that logically and historically preceded it.
Augustine’s anthropology was predicated on a profound moral apprehension
of sin and grace; his dogma of humanity was connected to the doctrine of God,
yes, but more vitally with hamartiology and soteriology. But the Christological
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debates of the fifth century were concerned with the concept of human
personhood rather than ethical aspects of the human such as freewill and
“fallenness”. There may be good reasons why anthropology precedes
Christology in a theological system, but it strains the credibility of a logical-
historical progress of dogma in history to maintain that Augustine’s dogma of
humankind preceded the dogma of Christ.
Another aspect of this lecture that needs to be considered is how Orr’s
loyalty to the classical Christological dogma was being gently qualified by his
belief in the church’s ongoing realization of ancient dogmas. In this instance,
he held that the church needed to hear the Christological truth hushed at the
Council of Chalcedon but protected by the Alexandrian party, in the
Monophysite and Monothelite errors (194-205), and by the flawed Eucharistic
theology of the Lutherans. To its credit, nineteenth-century theology heard the
plea for a “richer view of the communion of the natures” in which the human
is thought of as receptive of the divine. Schleiermacher and Hegel opened up a
new avenue for Christology by breaking the weak link in the old Christology,
namely, considering “humanity and divinity as in a sense strange to each…”
The human is not annulled or robbed of its integrity by union with the divine
but is, in fact, completed by it (175, 193-95, 203; also 288, ftn. 1). Orr was not
wholly satisfied with nineteenth-century German Christology or so naïve to
think it solved all the unresolved issues of classical Christology. But like
Dorner, who heavily treads the footnotes of this lecture and whose own
mediation of Lutheran and Reformed Christologies was clearly a stimulus,60
he was optimistic that modern theology’s axiom of the “kindredness” of the
divine and the human could leave the older dogma of the two natures intact
and more truly realized (176; also 330-38).
[5.4.7] The soteriological epoch (lecture 7, 206-39) sprouted on the
providentially prepared soil of the juristic western European mind. The
objective dogma of the atonement was the Middle Ages’ achievement and
honours go especially to Anselm’s masterwork Cur deus homo.61 Anselm built
60 In this connection see especially Orr, “Enhypostasis,” in ERE 5, 309-310. 61 Orr thought that Abelard was wrestling with the atonement apart from knowledge of Cur deus homo—proof that the eleventh-century church was being tarried by the Spirit to
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upon the established dogma of Christ as God and human as well as
Augustine’s deep grasp of human sin to reach heights not yet attained in the
church’s theologizing about salvation: “what there is in the character of God
which requires Him to react against sin in the form of punishment, and under
what conditions the forgiveness of sin is possible” (222). If the form of his
argument borrowed from some faulty categories “from the sphere of private
rights” peculiar to his age, the essence of his argument, that Christ’s death was
a necessary, propitiatory sacrifice for sin, was an achievement for the ages
(223). It would be ably refined by Aquinas and the scholastics, and
definitively determined through the Reformers’ trembling apprehension of sin
and grace (210, 231-34).
That the church dogmatized the atonement only in the Middle Ages
presents a problem, Orr admitted, even as he trumpeted this correlation of the
logical order of doctrine with the history of dogma as “a new proof of the
general soundness of my theory” (216). According to evangelicals,
Christianity is a religion of redemption: how could the church not have a
dogma of atonement in the hand until a millennium after Calvary? Further,
does the early church’s understanding of the death of Christ as a ransom paid
to Satan really point to Anselm’s satisfaction theory? Orr doubted that the
‘ransom theory’ of the atonement really was the predominant theory of the
early church, and plundered the apostolic fathers and the early theologians for
citations regarding the “blood of Christ” as a vicarious sacrifice (211-20).
More to the point: “On no subject is it more necessary to distinguish between
doctrine as it is held in the immediacy of faith, and the examination and
discussion which result in giving that doctrine scientific shape” (211). The
rudiments of the dogma of the atonement were in fact in place in the copious
theologizing on the death of Christ before the Middle Ages, but latently, as the
religious experience that Christ’s cross had a propitiatory effect that is the
ground of God’s gracious dealing with sinners. It found a perverse reflection
too. As Dorner had pointed out, the ransom theory is a grotesque witness to
divine justice (217); even the Roman mass evidences that the church knows in
its heart the Lamb who took away the sin of the world even if its mind failed
dogmatize this topic (229-30). This is false: see M. T. Clanchy, Abelard (Oxford: Blackwell, 1997), 282-83.
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to grasp the full consequences of the cross (219-20). Thus could Anselm
himself claim Cur deus homo as not providing a new doctrine but a clear
statement of what has always been believed (211).
[5.4.8] The problem of historical continuity in regard to what he called
(like Thomasius) “subjective soteriology”, that is to say, the application of
atonement, looms up again in the eighth lecture (241-75) and requires all of
Orr’s dexterity to preserve the integrity of his argument for the progress of
dogma. “[E]very doctrine…has its ‘hour’—the period when it emerges into
individual prominence, and becomes the subject of exhaustive discussion,”
and the sixteenth century was the moment when the positive preparation
provided by the dogmas of sin and objective atonement coincided with the
negative state of the medieval church to drive hearts and minds back upon the
free grace of God in Christ (243-44, 256). The questions being raised in this
century in independent centres of reform clearly show how the Spirit was
awakening the church to the good news that sinners are made righteous solely
through the work of Christ, appropriated by faith rather than works (244-45).
But was the great Protestant doctrine of justification by faith alone that
arose in this theological turmoil a novelty as the Council of Trent charged?
Orr considered the explanations traditionally offered by Protestants to defend
Luther’s theological breakthrough. Yes, Scripture teaches justification by faith
alone. But to make this the sole basis of the argument would wreck his case
for organic continuity (245). Yes, there was in all likelihood an “evangelical
chain of witnesses” holding out for free grace in Christ at the peripheries of
the medieval church—and all honour to them (250)! Yet Orr did not subpoena
them. The organism of Christian truth requires tangible continuity of dogma.
At the same time it was inadmissible that the Roman church had not gone
“seriously astray in its doctrinal and practical apprehension of the divine
method of the sinner’s salvation.” Especial blame should be laid upon “the
sacramentarian principle” that emerged early in the church’s history and
worked itself out logically in a hazy doctrine of justification as the making of
the sinner righteous through a sacramental apparatus rather than as a
declaration of the sinner’s righteousness through Christ’s death and
resurrection (246, 248).
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Yet the Reformers’ attitude to early church tradition, as well as their
recovery of the radical Augustinian doctrines of sin and grace (254-56),
sustain Orr’s conviction that the Reformation provoked no real rupture with
the past. Protestantism stands in direct continuity with what was deepest and
most vital in the theology and piety of the past, and was “its legitimate
outcome and vindication” (246-47). His argument hung on an appeal to the
“religious self-estimate,” in this case the consciousness of sovereign and
radical grace that was always present in the church’s deeper life and most
prescient theology but not explicated in its officially sanctioned doctrines,
decrees, and cult, indeed, sometimes even suppressed by it (251). “[S]aintly
souls,” finding the sanctioned penitential machinery and official doctrine of
justification in the medieval church insufficient to relieve guilt, sought
comfort in “the fountain-head of all mercy in the grace of God in Jesus
Christ,” tacitly affirming the Protestant doctrine of justification by faith in
spite of their formal theology (252).
Orr nabbed the notion of the “religious self-estimate” from Ritschl,
although it owed its parentage to Schleiermacher and found kinship with the
neo-Lutheran and mediating theologians’ attempt to unfold doctrine from the
comprehensive experience of faith. It provides the copestone to his argument.
The yawning chasm in the late medieval church between the consciousness of
utter dependency upon the grace of God in Christ and the quasi-Pelagian cult
and theology became so acute that resolution could only be found by
conforming doctrine to the root experience of grace. “…[T]rue breach of
continuity would have been to adhere, as the Tridentine Fathers did, to the
letter of Catholic dogma against the consciousness of salvation by grace alone,
with which that dogma stood in contradiction” (254). After the sixteenth
century, Protestantism, not Romanism, is the trunk of the Christian organism,
rooted in the apostolic testimony and infused with the living sap of the
religious consciousness of the past church.
[5.4.9] In the ninth lecture (277-308) Orr reviewed the religious
trajectories sprung by the Reformation: intra-Lutheran debates over
Christology (286-90); Reformed theological reflection on the doctrines of
election and the covenants (290-304); the development of deism, pietism, and
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rationalism in the wake of the Reformation’s “establishing of the principle of
private judgement” in place of churchly authority (285-86, 304-8).
While the vast territory traversed gives the ninth lecture a touristic feel,
the train of the original argument for a progress of dogma is maintained, which
set Orr on a final collision course with Harnack. He strongly disagreed with
Harnack’s understanding of dogma as something peculiar to the religious and
intellectual context of the first four centuries of the church. This had let
Harnack terminate the history of dogma in the sixteenth century so as to
underscore the distance of the “genius” of Protestantism from a dogmatic
conception of Christianity (see 4.3.1).62 Orr maintained that evangelical
theology stands upon the dogmatic attainments of the earlier epochs of the
church (279-80, 283). Even if no new dogma has been formulated since the
Reformation the development of dogma has not ceased. Not only is a dogma
of ‘the last things’ a desideratum, the flurry of confessions in the post-
Reformation era shows providence moving the church to take stock of the
progress of dogma (281). “[T]he Church had now the whole range of doctrine
before it, and could view the development from the commencement of its
close” (284). Confessions record the church explicating as a systematically
ordered organism of thought the unity of belief it has always known in the
depths of experience. Orr strikes the same note as “the scientific ideal”
[wissenschaftliche Ideal] of Kliefoth and Thomasius, which held that a final
step in the formation of a dogmatic symbol was an ongoing balance of system,
finesse of expression, and fullness of cultic and liturgical consequence.63 The
systematic expression of dogma which began in earnest in the post-
Reformation era was and is, he considered, a necessary and invaluable
component of the progress of dogma. And the fact that the great confessions of
the Anglican, Lutheran, and Presbyterian churches remain largely
unadulterated and still authoritative is evidence both of their quality and the
organic continuity of Christian thought over the ages (284-85), wrote Orr,
glossing over perhaps some the major confessional differences in his
insistence on evangelical doctrinal consensus.
62 Harnack exempts the Roman dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary (1854). 63 See Grahl, “Verklärung—Die Konzeption der Heilsgeschichte bei Theodor Kliefoth,” 28-32.
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[5.4.10] “This word ‘traditional’ does not alarm me,” Orr boasted
before the 1907 assembly of the Evangelical Alliance.64 Upon arriving at the
final lecture (309-54) of PD his traditionalism seems indisputable. Yet his
treatment of the last things not only lodges a hint of doubt about his
traditionalism, it threatens to unravel his tight case for the logical-historical
progress of dogma. It is not his formal treatment of eschatology that warrants
this judgement. Orr arrived at the doctrine of the last things toward the end of
the lecture fully out of breath and offered little by way of substance apart from
addressing Victorian squeamishness with the doctrine of hell (345-52).
Eschatology proper seems to be here a sidebar to far more central undertaking:
recapitulating the entire development of dogma from an eschatological
perspective.65
This appears to mean—and it must be noted that Orr’s thinking
throughout this lecture is uncharacteristically vague, almost as if he trembled
to systematize his thoughts for fear of what might happen—that with the
conclusion of the progress of dogma creeping close, a measured and
constructive revisiting of Christian fundamentals is possible. (The owl of
Minerva flies only at dusk?) Orr admitted the theological turmoil of his time
was unsettling. Yet he remained assured that the organism of dogma will
never be uprooted. The sure law of history will bring orthodoxy through this
stormy century of questions and criticisms with its foundations strengthened
and its edifice embellished (317-18, 352-53). “With God on our side, history
behind us, and the unchanging needs of the human heart to appeal to, we need
tremble for the future of neither” (353-54).
What distinguished this task from confessionalization was the
nineteenth century’s predestined place in the development of dogma. Enter
Christology. The theological renaissance of the nineteenth century has made
possible a view of the history of dogma as a unified organism growing toward
its appointed destiny in Christ: Schleiermacher’s influential definition of
64 Orr, “Evangelical Principles in the Bible,” in Maintaining The Unity. Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference and Diamond Jubilee Celebration of the Evangelical Alliance. Held in London, July 1907 (London: The Religious Tract Society, 1907), 150. 65 Stephen Williams’ perceptive introduction to the Regent College edition of PD is the only assessment I am aware of that detects the path Orr appears to be opening up.
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Christianity as the religion in which all is referred back to Christ; modern
theology’s invaluable apprehension of the created receptiveness of the finite
and the human for the infinite and the divine; and Kant’s fecund
“conception…of the world as a teleological moral system, with God as its
author, and the Kingdom of God as its end” (312-15, 319, 330-38). Orr
revisited the progress of dogma to reread each step in God’s purpose for the
world as grounded in Christ as its apex and telos—an eschatological insight
made possible only in his century.
Orr left this ambitious proposal in draft form, although suggestive
leads are not lacking.66 In prolegomena (319-23), for example, everything
should refer explicitly to Christ—but not in the reductionist fashion of the
Ritschlians. As the incarnation reveals God’s purpose for the world is to be
gathered up into Christ (Eph. 1:10), Christ is the answer to all human longings
and strivings. Apologetics, accordingly, should seek points of contact with
other religions and philosophies. With the God-man as the ultimate disproof of
the “hard antitheses” between the divine and the created, the supernatural and
the natural, the church should not shy away from identifying analogies
between God’s special revelation and his continuous operations in nature and
history.
To take another example, the notes of divine immanence and the divine
fatherhood that the Hegelians and Ritschlians sound with indiscriminate
universality can, in fact, enrich, the dogma of God (323-27) if cast through
teleology, specifically, the gradual bringing of sons and daughters into the
kingdom of God. The old Calvinist shibboleth of divine election will find a
second lease on life in this teleological conception of Christianity (162-70,
291-95). “There is a sentence somewhere in Lange’s Dogmatics which acutely
says—‘Election presides at the making of its objects’” (169). Election
evidences God’s immanence in history, his raising up individuals and peoples
to be “centres of influence” to effect the spread of the transforming presence
of Christ.67 Orr expected the remedial dogma of the atonement (338-45) to be
complemented by the modern accent on the organic solidarity of the body with
66 This is pursued in The Christian View (summarized on pages 32-36). 67 Orr’s criticism of the Reformed doctrine of election is repeated in “Calvinism,” in ERE 3, 146-155.
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its crucified and resurrected Head, so as to cleave the death of Christ to God’s
original goal for the cosmos to be unified with him through the incarnation of
the Son. In spite of the perils for orthodoxy posed by nineteenth-century
thought, Orr’s ledger for his century’s theology records a net gain for dogma
(335)—this, from one reproved as a “diehard”!68
This is daring theologizing for evangelical Presbyterianism. But a
sense of regret for grand theological vistas opened but left unexplored lingers
over PD.69 At one point Orr whispered the possibility that the dogma of the
person of Christ might become the one organizing principle of the organism of
dogma, even though it would undermine his case for the progress of dogma
(336-7). He admitted his thesis would be also overthrown if the Ritschlians
succeeded in persuading theology to make the kingdom of God the
encompassing category for dogma (23), demurring: “the time is not yet ripe
for making it the one and all-inclusive notion in theology.”70 And yet, it would
seem that the kingdom of God, which he treated rather fleetingly in The
Christian View and not at all in PD, actually contours his understanding of the
teleological and Christological shape of history. It is worthwhile, if somewhat
messy, to excavate this subterranean role of the kingdom in his thinking
because it expands his meagre dogma of the last things in startling fashion.
Orr came out swinging at the Ritschlians for isolating Christ’s
preaching of the kingdom from the person of the preacher. The coming
kingdom was not only the central theme of the preaching of the historical
Christ, it is Christ’s present transformation of the world into the kingdom of
God. Marshalling Schleiermacher, neo-Lutheran and mediating theologians
for support, he defined the kingdom of God as a “new life proceeding from
Christ” that gradually permeates and transforms individuals and society.
Against the Ritschlians, Orr insisted on the kingdom’s reality as the rule of the
risen and ascended Christ. Against their wish to make all doctrines fit under
the aegis of the kingdom—which advertently excises all doctrines not explicit
in the preaching of the historical Christ—he argued that the “true place of the
idea of the kingdom of God in theology is as a teleological conception. It
68 E.g. Reardon, Religious Thought in the Victorian Age, 315. 69 Scorgie (51) comes to the same conclusion regarding The Christian View. 70 The Christian View, 353. For what follows see 36, 351-61. See also the overlooked article, “About Church and Sacraments,” The United Presbyterian Magazine 17 (1900): 62-65.
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defines the aim and purpose of God in creation and redemption.” The kingdom
is the gradual transformation of the world toward God’s cosmic end: “the
unity of all things natural and spiritual in Christ.” As such, the sundry
processes of world history find their point of reference and goal in the
kingdom, and Orr cannot help but add that the remarkable conditions of the
nineteenth-century likely “together portend some striking development of the
kingdom of God which shall cast all others into the shade—a crisis perhaps,
which shall have the most profound effect upon the future of humanity.”71
When we consider that the immanent law of history finds its terminus
in the eschatological kingdom a few aspects of the argument of PD become
somewhat more solid. First, the fundamental unity of the history of dogma
with the processes of world history is underscored. Second, the historian of
dogma must view the subject matter with an eye to its end: that Christ will be
all in all. Orr’s cursory recension of the progress of dogma in light of the
union of the human and divine that finds its centre and consummation in Jesus
Christ was, in fact, such a venture. Finally, it points to his bold anticipation of
the shape of the dogma of the last things. Alan Sell pounced on the last of
Orr’s Dogmenkreisen: “the eschatological debate of the late nineteenth century
hardly has the weight that Orr’s other ‘moments’ have: we can perhaps see
this from our vantage point more clearly than he could from his.” 72 This
criticism, however, fails to detect the implicit ‘kingdom thinking’ of the final
lecture.
But the Church has another and yet more difficult task before it, if it is to retain its ascendancy over the minds of men. That task is to bring Christianity to bear as an applied power on the life and conditions of society…in this sense to bring in the Kingdom of God among men. I look to the twentieth century to be an era of Christian Ethic even more than of Christian theology (353).
For Orr, eschatology is clearlz less about heaven and hell than the
transformation of society into the kingdom of God.
Victorian church historians have long recognized the so-called social
question, that is to say, the relationship of Christianity to culture, as the
burning issue for Scottish churches from 1870 onward. Industrialization’s
71 The Christian View, 360-61. 72 Sell, D&DF, 146.
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spawn of poverty, irreligion, and social vice challenged Presbyterian churches
to consider how to leaven the seething cities with the gospel.73 Orr’s
confidence that ethics would preoccupy the future church was not just
conservative smugness that the dogmas of the faith were settled for good. It
was the clarion call of an evangelical cultural Protestant to realize the kingdom
of God among ‘the dark satanic mills’ of industrial Britain.
As a final point, Orr’s ethicizing of the dogma of the last things makes
explicable (thought not wholly excusable) the utter absence of ecclesiology in
his schema—about which Sell rightly grumbled. By defining the church “as
the visible expression of this kingdom in the world…”74 the church’s
preaching the gospel, administering the sacraments, and working for the
healing of the nations aims to transform the world into Christ’s kingdom. Does
Orr’s subsuming of eschatology under “kingdom” rather than “church” owe
something to the reticence of his secessionist denomination to ascribe too
much civil and political power to the institutional church as the agent of
Christ? This was certainly not a problem in the mediating theologians and neo-
Lutherans’ similar kingdom vision for society.75 In any case, the dogma of the
last things, which first appeared in PD as trite and peripheral, becomes, when
linked to his scattered, embryonic thoughts on the teleological and
Christological nature of history, the capstone to the development of the
organic system of dogma. It functions in PD as ecclesiology did for neo-
Lutherans,76 as the speculum in which the entire development of the organism
of Christian truth can be seen anew in the brightened light of its goal: “Him
gathering up all created things into one in Himself,” as Orr put it in his
enthusiastic assessment of Irenaeus’ theology (70).
73 Welch, Protestant Thought, 2: 212-65. For the Scottish context see Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk, 110-53, Witherington, “The Churches in Scotland, c. 1870- c. 1900: Towards a New Social Conscience?”; Brown, “Reform, Reconstruction, Reaction: The Social Vision of Scottish Presbyterians c. 1830-c. 1930”; Johnston McKay, “The Kingdom of God and the Presbyterian Churches’ Social Theology and Action c. 1880-c.1914,” (PhD Diss., University of Edinburgh, 2007), 240-328. 74 The Christian View, 358. 75 See F. W. Graf, “Protestantische Theologie und die Formierung der bürgerlichen Gesellschaft,” in Profile des neuzeitlichen Protestantismus, Vol. 1, ed. F. W. Graf (Gütersloh: Gütersloher Verlaghaus, 1991), 11-54. 76 Providence had prepared nineteenth-century theology to “place the doctrine of the church at the middle point of dogmatic development, from which the whole Christian life can be viewed” (Kliefoth, Einleitung, 89).
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5.5. Conclusion James Orr’s PD fittingly caps this study of the troubling of the old
doctrinal commitments of Presbyterians by the new historical sensitivity of the
Victorians. The Reformed and evangelical lifeblood of his tradition courses
through PD but its argument has been shaped too by the fresh intellectual
insights of Scottish Presbyterianism’s nineteenth-century environment, and
lines of critical adaption are also prominent. That Orr was able to work a vast
amount of historical material into a compact and credible argument is no small
feat. It testifies to his theological acumen and his passion to commend
Christianity to an age wracked by disbelief. Within his larger labour of
commending Christianity as whole, that is to say, as worldview grounded on
Christ, the study of the history of dogma plays an important part. Indeed, it
carries a sense of apologetic urgency: to root the church’s confidence in its
future progress in concrete continuity with its past rather than in suspect
intellectual trends of the present. “Christianity is, in short, its best apology.
The unfolding of it as in its essence embracing a view of God, the world, and
man, and bringing a provision for man’s spiritual needs, in which both mind
and heart can rest with fullest satisfaction, is the surest certification of its
divine original” (322-23). Orr unfolded his century’s dominant category of
history, organic growth,77 as a unified movement of Spirit and fused it with
several variables typical of his era of Victorian thought to achieve an
irreducibly nineteenth-century history of dogma, capable of affirming the
church’s progress in history along with the stability of its fundamental beliefs
over history.
A few of PD’s peculiar features beg for brief comment by way of
critical appreciation. First, Orr held together the religious authorities of
Scripture, tradition, and religious experience as sources of doctrine more
adeptly than might appear at first glance. That Scripture is the ultimate source
of doctrine is axiomatic, of course. But like most evangelicals of his era Orr
knew that the easy bridge between the Bible and systems of doctrine traversed
by the Protestant Orthodox and their descendants like Cunningham had been 77 Stöve, “Zeitliche Differenzierung und Geschichtsbewußtein in der neuzeitlichen Historiographie,” 30-37.
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detonated by Newman and German theology. His tradition’s high valuation of
doctrine and its sole sourcing in Scripture could now only be justified within a
theory of doctrinal development. As such, while he was bullish about the
doctrinal nature of Christianity he did not consider revelation as exclusively
propositional or the Bible as a storehouse of doctrines. There was a “sum of
truths…involved” (not contained) in the Biblical revelation that the church
needed to discern and unfold as doctrine (8). Like Rainy, he located the
genesis of doctrine in the church’s “thinking out” of the facts of revelation
recorded in the Bible, although his interest lay less with the beginning of the
process than its climax. And precisely here, “Hegeling” opened up for him a
dizzyingly wide vista: a system of doctrine developing over the centuries of
the church’s life in “genetic connection with the organic past” (329), and yet
manifesting an astounding adaptability and sensitivity to each age—and all
this under divine provision. Church tradition took on for him an aureole not
seen in Protestant theology since the Reformers’ appeal to the fathers.
It must be quickly added, however, that Orr’s idealist presuppositions
worked at the very same time to silence tradition as a ressourcement for
contemporary dogmatics and devotion.78 In contrast to Rainy, who lodged a
lonely objection to the Victorian cult of progress, and accordingly, thought
past theology might be dusted off to the present church’s benefit (see 3.3.6),
Orr’s scheme of the logical-historical progress of dogma treated tradition as a
fait accompli. Once a given epoch has accomplished its God given task, its
work was done. Lastly, insistence by Schleiermacher, Dorner, Newman, and
others that doctrine was second-order reflection on the fact of religious faith
reverberates throughout PD. This should dissuade from breezy
characterizations of Orr as a rationalist. Not only does dogma always resonate
with the converted heart, in some key instances, religious experience actually
carried certain dogmas in utero until their divinely decreed due date.
The sort of equilibrium Orr sought between Scripture, tradition, and
experience needs to be underlined because some of his interpreters presume
from his friendship with Princeton Seminary that he thought similarly of the
78 E.g., Irenaeus is singled out (70) as holding much promise for contemporary theology.
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nature of revelation and development of doctrine.79 This assumption is wrong.
If Orr’s attention to the propositional nature of revelation is overwrought, his
overall position is not far away from touching upon every aspect of McGrath’s
helpful taxonomy of doctrine as truth claim, interpretation of narrative,
interpretation of experience, and social demarcation.80 Indeed, the great
advantage of these nineteenth-century, idealist-wrought versions of salvation
history, whether Hofmann’s (see 3.3.3) or now here Orr’s genus of
Dogmengeschichte, was their ability to mute the dissonance between the
nineteenth-century religious authorities by integrating the record of salvation
(Bible) with the appropriation of salvation (experience and doctrine) as a
unified spiritual history. But given the Bible’s historic stance in Protestantism
as the Word of God over against piety and tradition, the cost of this advantage
must be considered high indeed.
Second, that Christ occupied the centre of Orr’s theology in itself is not
remarkable—he held such a place of honour for all major nineteenth-century
theologians. How he occupied the centre, however, reflects fascinating
changes in Victorian evangelicalism. Orr was one of the more capable
evangelicals seeking to broaden the traditional remedial focus of his heritage,
not by displacing Christ at the centre but by expanding him.81 Christianity
never ceased being for him a religion of redemption mediated through
personal faith in the Saviour. But now the scope of redemption has reached
beyond the pious individual to the social organism, and redemption transforms
the creature rather than merely forgives it. Hence a ‘Christian view of God and
the world as centring upon the incarnation’. Accordingly, Christ, whose role in
the development of dogma was conspicuously absent at the instigation of this
study in Newman and Cunningham (as also in Rainy), took over a prominent
role in Orr’s argument for the progress of dogma. He heard the pleas of
Ritschlians like Bruce for theology to be Christianized by closer attention to
79 This is especially true of Oldham, who lumps all nineteenth-century evangelicals under the views of Warfield and Carl Henry, and to a lesser extent Toon. 80 McGrath, The Genesis of Doctrine, 35-80. 81 See the study of Abraham Kuyper by Peter Heslam, Creating a Christian Worldview: Abraham Kuyper’s Lectures on Calvinism. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998). Also important in this regard was the evangelical Baptist Augustus H. Strong’s widely read Systematic Theology, 3 vol., rev. ed. (Philadelphia: The Judson P, 1907). See the fine study by Grant Wacker, Augustus H. Strong and the Dilemma of Historical Consciousness (1985; reprint, Macon: Mercer UP, 2005).
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the historical Jesus and his preaching of the kingdom of God; his
Christianizing of the origin and development of dogma, however, hearkened
back to the Vermittlungstheologie’s understanding of the kingdom of God as
the ontological rather than merely ethical presence of Christ.82
Another way in which Christ holds the centre of the process of
doctrinal development is in how all heresy and error find ultimate reference to
him. Schleiermacher was favourably cited: “The natural heresies in
Christianity are the Docetic and the Nazaretic, the Manichaean and Pelagian”
(72). Modern theologians were accordingly categorized under old heresies:
Rothe and the Ritschlians repeat the Monarchian heresy that gives Christ the
predicate ‘God’ in a merely honorary way (89, 101-2), Schleiermacher and
even Dorner court the Sabellian heresy by treating the Logos as a mode of
revelation rather than the personal Son (95). But this seems contrived for
apologetic gain rather than for substantial argument. Given the importance for
Orr’s favourite theologian, Dorner, of the idea of Christianity’s ‘natural
heresies’, as well as his own theological suppositions, it is somewhat
surprising that he did not pursue this idea with more rigour.
Third, I resist the temptation to criticize Orr’s thesis for “a true law and
logic” that drove the development of dogma (9) simply because its smacks of
idealism. W. H. C. Frend charged that the discipline of church history was in
the thralls of ideological captivity when Harnack burst on the scene in the
1870s.83 The past two chapters have made clear, however, that the Ritschlians,
no less than Orr, held philosophical assumptions about history that directed
their steps through the field of the history of doctrine. There are serious
problems with Orr’s “Hegeling” on historical and theological grounds, but it
should at least be appreciated how he sought to employ the concepts of
development and evolution consistent with their actual philosophical or
scientific principles—this, in sharp contrast to the broad-church bleating for
82 Compare to Dorner: “Christianity is the higher unity, and thus the end, of heathenism and Judaism, through its fundamental idea and fundamental fact—the absolute divine Incarnation in Jesus Christ and the work of the Holy Spirit, the source of which is the God-man and the aim the realization of the kingdom of God” (A System of Christian Doctrine, 2:180). 83 W. H. C. Frend, “Church Historians of the Early Twentieth Century: Adolph von Harnack (1851-1930),” JEH 52 (2001): 85-86.
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doctrinal revision in the name of development.84 In effect, he stole away
Victorian-era liberal theology’s greatest weapon against traditional
Christianity, its appeal to progress in theology. Because the church’s dogmatic
system was organically continuous and logically determined, it could not be
discarded without killing the creature.
If anything, Orr’s “Hegeling” can be criticized for not being as
thoroughgoing as it should have been. To an extent, PD’s admirable leanness
is achieved by a Procrustean historiography. It is not clear why Orr constantly
crimped the historical narrative to conceal or avoid non-intellectual aspects in
the progress of dogma. A real benefit to emphasising dogmatic history as one
movement of Spirit would be that the historian of dogma could draw equally
upon political, economic, and social factors to illuminate the history of
theological ideas in a manner amenable to modern historiography. One does
not need to agree with every aspect of Wolfhart Pannenberg’s work to
appreciate his contribution at this very point, nor to see the promise inherent in
his thinking for converting contemporary church history from its
methodological atheism.85
Earnest criticism of PD best starts at the end. Simply put, Orr’s
“dogma of eschatology” crystallizes all the problems of “Hegeling” in the
history of dogma. Hegel has always tempted thinkers to the arrogance of
“ending” history. Whoever takes such presumptuous place at the end
effectively transcends the flow of history. It comes as no surprise, then, that
Orr surveyed the logical-historical progress of dogma Micaiah-like in the very
throne room of Yahweh (I Kings 22)—a prospect that rendered the sort of
self-awareness enjoined by Rainy to the locality of the present interpreter of
revelation applicable only to past mortals.
84 E.g. note the vague appeal to ‘the progress of Spirit’ by the C of S broad churchman and theologian John Tulloch in Movements of Religious Thought in Britain during the Nineteenth Century, 4, 334-35. A similar attempt to liberalize Reformed dogma from inside the C of S, but more influenced by Schweizer than Hegel, was William Hastie’s The Theology of the Reformed Church in its Fundamental Principles (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1904). 85 E.g. Pannenberg, “Hermeneutic and Universal History,” in Basic Questions in Theology, Vol. 1, trans. George Kehm (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1970), 96-136. A key work from a Pannenbergian perspective, unfortunately not translated, is Ekkehard Mühlenberg, Epochen der Kirchengeschichte, 3rd ed. (Wiesbaden: Quelle & Meyer, 1993).
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Further, by holding the end of dogma nigh, does Orr finally default to a
merely logical view of the development of the organism of dogma? “[The
church] is complete in doctrine, she is incomplete in the consequences of
doctrine,” a prominent neo-Lutheran wrote in a vein not so far removed from
Cunningham and the Princeton theologians.86 This dogmatically conservative
genus of Dogmengeschichtsschreibung appeared to feel secure with the idea of
the historical progress of dogma only if the momentum of development had
been substantially exhausted before it arrived in their own epoch. Orr lived at
the heyday of Protestant missions, when many were awaiting the world
churches to make a positive mark upon Christian life and belief,87 yet never
once did he seem to contemplate the prospect that the spread of the gospel to
the ends of the earth might ripple through the church’s system of dogma.
The question raised earlier of this “Hegeling” genus of
Dogmengeschichte was this: when the history of dogma is framed through the
lens of classical Christology, is the church’s system of dogma “sinless”?
Unlike other members of his genus, Orr did not analogize the church or dogma
to the divine-human nature of Christ so as to transubstantiate either. In his
case, though, the locus of the kingdom of God sacralised the history of dogma
in everything but name. The eschatological goal of the kingdom—the growing
unity of all things in Christ—was interpreted through the category of organic
becoming, which had the effect of consecrating the various historical
processes that had created modern Christendom. It seems that Orr was not
clearly distinguishing between teleology and eschatology.
In this regard, it is worth observing how at the hands of many liberal,
neo-Lutheran, and mediating German theologians of this era, the Lutheran
doctrine of the physical ubiquity of the ascended Christ was coupled with
absolute idealism’s understanding of divine becoming in history to enflesh the
presence of Christ in the progressive movements of world history.88 In contrast
to much of the popular religious opinion in the late Victorian and Edwardian
86 Wilhelm Löhe (1808-72), founder of the Missouri-Synod Lutheran church, cited in Hornig, “Lehre und Bekenntnis im Protestantismus,” 179-80. In this regard see James S. McClanahan, Jr., “Benjamin B. Warfield: Historian of Doctrine in Defence of Orthodoxy, 1881-1921,” (PhD diss., Union Theological Seminary in Virginia, 1988). Warfield enthusiastically reviewed PD in PRR 13 (1902): 486-491. 87 See Stanley, The World Missionary Conference, Edinburgh 1910, 91-131. 88 See Douglas Farrow, Ascension and Ecclesia (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 192-93.
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era, Orr explicitly disavowed collating the Christianization of society with the
fullness of the kingdom that would come upon Christ’s parousia.89 Yet it is
noteworthy that he, along with all the Vermittlungstheologen of Reformed
background, was swayed over to the Lutheran Christology. By not carefully
locating the absence of Christ in his heavenly, bodily-circumscribed state,
Christ becomes bodily present in the growing kingdom, i.e., in various
historical processes of renewal and transformation. None of this is followed
through by Orr in a manner that should raise hackles—his treatment of the
kingdom of God was merely in an appendix in The Christian View—save in
its implications for the question we are considering of the infallibility of the
history of the church. Although Orr himself did not make the connection
explicit, his dogma of eschatology lays bare his thought process: the church’s
end tends to the consecration of its progress. The history of dogma, thereby,
becomes implicitly sacrosanct and the system inviolable—a “victorious
progress” and a “rapid march of the gospel to victory.”90
The bugbear of the metaphysical consecration of historical events or
processes long held against Hegel is, then, a very real problem in PD. If
Cunningham made doctrine too divine by too close proximity to holy
Scripture, Orr made it too divine by too close proximity to holy history. The
result is a reflux of Cunningham’s muscular dogmatism and unflinching
confidence in the triumph of orthodoxy, albeit secured by means that would
have the FC father rolling in his grave. Under Orr’s aegis, there is simply no
margin for error in church history. Does the very nature of conservative
“Hegeling” breed this deficiency? Kliefoth, Thomasius, Dorner and now Orr
shrank from going as far as Baur in making heresy and falsehood absolutely
integral to the dialectical course of dogmatic development. Within this weaker
methodological rather than ontological dialectic, sin remained accidental to the
89 The Christian View, 354-55. For good overview of European religious opinion at this time see Brian Stanley, “The Outlook for Christianity in 1914,” in Cambridge History of Christianity, Vol. 8: World Christianity c.1815-c.1914, ed. Sheridan Gilley (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006), 593-600. 90 In Neglected Factors (70, 84; see also 34, 113-28, 201-2) and The Early Church (37) Orr favoured literary and archaeological evidence for the church’s rapid spread through the Empire and ballooning influence among the dispossessed but especially the powerful. He had an almost obsessive interest on recent excavations of catacombs in Rome that yielded dubiously high estimates of four million buried Christians before the time of Constantine! Dorner had similarly spoken of the “undisturbed assurance of victory” and “grand victorious career” of dogma (of Christ) (82-83).
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genesis of dogma and the history of the church in general. But one need not
pay the steep indemnity required by the dialectic of absolute idealism to find
sin riddling the development of doctrine. Nor does one need to maintain a “fall
theory” of church history to take with the utmost seriousness the nature of the
church as simul justus et peccator, which finds it, in its “falleness”, stumbling
into error of belief even as it seeks to go forward in truth.
“There is a theory about the history of dogma once impressively put
forward by Thomasius of Erlangen and Vilmar of Marburg,” Barth observed,
but now generally abandoned as obsolete, according to which each period of history is to be compared with a particular stage in the development of a living organism. Each age seems to have, so to speak, thrust upon itself and suggested to itself in a certain necessary sequence the special knowledge and the special confession of a quite definite side of revealed truth.91
Barth rejected this theory as one of natural theology’s insidious tendrils. And
yet he admitted that it maintained several important truths his peers were in
danger of overlooking in their mad scramble to break ranks with the
nineteenth century. “Every period of the Church does in fact want to be
understood as a period of the Church…” The history of doctrine manifests real
bonds of unity spanning time and place, as well as an abiding concern to
wrestle with the burning issues of each unique age in light of the one
confession of faith. Credo ecclesiam.
Clearly, Orr’s “bit of Hegeling“ in PD was linking those unique epochs
of the church’s confession of the one faith with bonds of unity so visible that it
would always likely disquiet the Word-centred Reformed tradition (see 30-2).
But what do we make of the fact that the history of dogma did seem to develop
in a logical sequence, although not so smoothly or neatly or decisively as its
proponents would like us to believe? The opinion of an eminent theologian
like John Macquarrie, namely, that there are simply too many lapses in the
historical record to sustain hope that the Spirit guides the process of dogmatic
development, might be the safer option but it is not the only conclusion
91 Barth, PT, 12-13, 15. The emphasis is Barth’s.
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possible.92 “One can hardly deny that the history of dogma follows an inner
trend,” concluded Lohse—a claim that a whole generation of resolutely
orthodox nineteenth-century theologians on both sides of the North Sea
impressively pursued with help from Hegel.93 If it is true, as Karl Löwith
asserts, that over the course of the nineteenth century “the metaphysical
historicism of the Hegelian system replaces the vanished doctrine of
providence of the Christian religion,” it is also true that it was no great stretch
for conservative Protestants who still believed in providence to find it written
in history in the manner dictated by idealist thought.94
92 John Macquarrie, “Doctrinal Development: Searching for Criteria,” in The Making and Remaking of Christian Doctrine, ed. Sarah Coakley and David A. Paillin (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1993), 161-176, especially 170. 93 Lohse, Epochen der Dogmengeschichte, 19. 94 Löwith, From Hegel to Nietzsche, 217.
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Conclusion 1. Introduction
On 19 June 1820 August Tholuck—not yet a “church father of the
nineteenth century” (Martin Kähler) of course—enjoyed an evening stroll with
his Berlin colleague August Neander, who was then preparing what would
become the nineteenth century’s most widely read history of the church (see
1.3.3).1 Tholuck’s diary reads: “In the evening I walked with Neander in the
Tiergarten. He spoke of how difficult it is to know exactly a single century.”2
A mere half-century of church history presents enough of a challenge
for a vastly inferior mind—even when that half-century covers only a single
church tradition and a single theological problem! So as we now proceed to
some summary observations on Scottish Presbyterian theologizing about
doctrine and history during the Victorian era, and suggest where this
tradition’s achievements has influenced present Reformed discussion of the
genesis and history of doctrine, it should be kept in mind that points are raised
tentatively and with no illusion of comprehensiveness. Rather, conclusions are
presented with wide ‘brushstrokes’—and these reflect, inevitably, my own
judgement as to the main themes.
No single “Reformed theory” of doctrinal origins or development rises
out of this tradition’s half-century of theological labour that could provide us
with a contained subject for appraisal. This is disappointing, perhaps, but
hardly surprising. The Reformed tradition lacks the centripetal force necessary
to create and establish a single theory of development. Calvinism has always
been “richly variegated, internally divided, and above all gradually yet
ceaselessly changing,” as the historian Philip Benedict observes.3 In contrast
to some other churches, the Reformed have not narrowed the scope of their
confessions to a single epoch or place; unlike some theological traditions, it 1 Allgemeine Geschichte der christlichen Religion und Kirche (6 vol., 1825-52); ET: General History of the Christian Religion and Church (9 vol., 1850-58). 2 Witte, Das Leben Tholuck’s, 1: 105. On Tholuck’s massive influence see Hans-Walter Krumwiede, “August G. Tholuck,” in Gestalter der Kirchengeschichte, Bd. 9.1, ed. Martin Greschat (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1993), 281-292. 3 Philip Benedict, Christ’s Churches Purely Reformed: A Social History of Calvinism (New Haven: Yale UP, 2002), 546.
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has hallowed no single philosophical method with which to pursue theology.
And obviously the Reformed lack what Karl Rahner deemed “the
advantage…of the higher criterion, to decide in any concrete case where the
boundary lies between dogma and mere theologoumenon, between certainly
correct and merely probable explication,” which he considered to be a function
of the papacy.4
FC and UP theologians were middle-class Scotsmen. They were
steeped in Westminster Calvinism and consciously oriented to the tenets and
piety of the evangelical mainstream of Victorian Protestantism. Yet within this
homogeneity there was variety, division, and change. As the theologians from
these denominations wrestled with the ‘problem of dogma and history’, they
were pulled between antagonistic tendencies within their evangelical
Presbyterian inheritance toward biblicism and confessionalism, and presented
with a dizzying array of theological and philosophical choices with which to
pursue the problem. Above all they had to reckon with a category of the
historical that was far from monolithic. “So dominant has history become as a
way of understanding man and his world,” wrote Jaroslav Pelikan, “that
modern men need to be reminded, also by history, that the category of the
historical has itself developed and changed.”5 Clearly, that this tradition
pursued the “problem” of the origin and genesis of doctrine through a shifting
category of the historical frustrates attempts to find a consistent “solution”
arising from their scholarship that could intersect contemporary theological
discussion of dogma and history. For depending on the “category of the
historical” that was operative, their historical study of doctrine could either
vindicate church dogma or vanquish it—both “trajectories” of
Dogmengeschichte (see 1.3) thrived within this single theological tradition. In
sum, this tradition-in-transition gives us merely an assortment of typical
nineteenth-century Protestant responses to the challenge of the rise of an
historical consciousness for Christian doctrine.
In the absence of a consensual theory of doctrinal origins and
development we turn instead to how the responses by Cunningham, Rainy,
4 Karl Rahner, “The Development of Dogma,” in Theological Investigations, Vol. 1, trans. Cornelius Ernst (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1961), 75. 5 Pelikan, Historical Theology, 33.
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Bruce, and Orr to the claims of history on doctrine reveal the ‘wear and tear’
of history upon the theological foundation stones of their tradition.
Evangelical Presbyterian theologians in Victorian Scotland came to realize
that the fact of the historical development of dogma implicated beliefs about
Scripture, Christ, church, and confession. Consequently, discussion of
doctrinal development typically took place in explicit connection with matters
of foundational theology. The burden of the following section will be to show
how these foundations were touched and transformed by the rise of an
historical consciousness; then to suggest how these altered foundations shaped
this tradition’s forays into the study of the history of doctrine.
2. Scripture & Tradition “The nineteenth-century revolution in attitudes to the Bible”6
overturned many aspects of the doctrine of Scripture that nineteenth-century
Presbyterians had inherited from their Protestant orthodox forefathers,
including, significantly, the notion of what Rainy called “the direct delivery”
of doctrine in revelation. Newman’s unsettling appreciation for an
unfathomable ‘idea’ of revelation was important, but it was above all
nineteenth-century German theology’s increasingly bullish belief in revelation
in history that broke the evangelical habit of discovering polished systems of
doctrine in the Bible. That the whole counsel of God “concerning all things
necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith and life, is…expressly set
down in Scripture” (Confession, 1.6) was still vigilantly maintained by
evangelical Presbyterians as they rethought the nature of doctrine in light of
the claims of history (see 1.2.2). But greater attention was now paid to the
historical and hermeneutical dimensions of church doctrine. It was
hermeneutical because, as Rainy realized, when encountering the facts of
revelation in history, “I must select words which enable my mind to mark how
it is taught to think, as well as how it is taught to feel or act.”7 It was historical
because the hermeneutics of doctrine were written across the annals of the
church, or, as Orr put it, “in genetic connection with the organic past.”8
6 Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk, 37. 7 Rainy, DDCD, 115. 8 Orr, PD, 329.
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Recognition of the hermeneutical dimension of doctrine helped FC and
UP theologians after Cunningham come to apply the distinction always
formally held by Protestants between God’s revealed word and the church’s
words about God’s revelation. In doing so the importance of church tradition
came to be acknowledged. Their recognition of the historical dimension of
doctrine was obviously abetted by the father of modern theology,
Schleiermacher. Has the overwhelming theocentricity of the Reformed
tradition bred a lack of interest in the faith of the believer that disinclined
Presbyterians from taking seriously the role of church tradition in the genesis
of doctrine, i.e., doctrine as the human response to the divine? It is not
surprising, then, that it was evangelical Presbyterians who proved so receptive
to Schleiermacher’s emphasis on the horizontal dimension of doctrine. (At the
same time, in opposition to the emerging liberal Protestant traditions that
merely tolerated dogma as discursive symbols of religious sentiment, these
Scots insisted that church doctrine was not merely horizontal—it conveyed
real truth about God).9 The growing recognition of the historical and
hermeneutical dimensions of doctrine enabled nothing less than the recovery
of the Reformation’s ancillary view of Scripture and tradition (see 1.2.2).
True, the theologians who spearheaded the recovery of the ancillary
view remained deeply naïve about the problem of authority for the traditional
Protestant understanding of the sufficiency of Scripture. Further, its
nineteenth-century revival was rather fleeting. As Bruce’s deprecation of the
dogmatic tradition suggests, evangelicals are chronically prey to dishonouring
their fathers and mothers in the faith. It is their bequest from the
Enlightenment, which violently resisted the notion of historically and socially
embedded truth. And the sins of the fathers were visited upon their children in
modern evangelicalism as well as the neo-orthodox revolt in the twentieth
century. “There is no such thing as Reformed Theology… only a continual
reference to the Word of God in Scripture,” declared the neo-orthodox 9 On this type see George Lindbeck, The Nature of Doctrine (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1984), 30-45. A recent example is Jörg Lauster, Zwischen Entzauberung und Remythisierung: Zum Verhältnis von Bible und Dogma (Leipzig: Evangelische Verlaganstalt, 2008), who argues that dogma is the church’s conceptual reflection on an ancient people’s recollection of the experience of transcendence. At the same time, I doubt that mainstream Presbyterians in the nineteenth century would be satisfied with Barth’s view of church dogma as “aiming” at the truth of biblical revelation, presumably without hitting target. “The Word of God is above dogma as the heavens are above the earth” (CD 1/1 §7, 266, 269) has a platonic ring to it.
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Presbyterian theologian W. W. Bryden (1883-1952). “A hankering after
tradition is a sign that the living thing in faith has been lost.”10
As imperfect as the Victorian recovery of the ancillary view of
Scripture and tradition was, it has enduring qualities. Orr’s reminder that
appeals to Scripture as the basis for doctrine cannot be divorced from growing
insight into Scripture, which itself requires the developing doctrinal tradition,
resonates with contemporary philosophical emphasis on the matrix of tradition
as the inextricable paradigm for individual and collective self-understanding.
As the philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre wrote: “The history of each of our own
lives is generally and characteristically embedded in and made intelligible in
terms of the larger and longer histories of a number of traditions.”11 Orr’s
point is echoed too in contemporary theological accounts of doctrine as a
Christian community’s conceptual framework for reading the biblical
narrative.12 In the parlance of these recent accounts, sola scriptura means that
the “narrative” remains primary over the “conceptual framework”, yet the
framework remains inextricable from the community’s self-understanding in
relation to the gospel narrative: in other words, as tradition.
Furthermore, evangelical Presbyterianism’s newfound appreciation for
church tradition as the womb of doctrinal formation was a milestone in the
modern development of Reformed theology—one to which contemporary
mainstream Reformed theology stands in conscious reference. For example,
the ‘Bible religion’ that has so often blighted Reformed theology has been
formally disavowed during dialogue between the World Alliance of Reformed
Churches and Rome.13 The Reformed voices in this ecumenical dialogue
speak candidly of “the decisive though subordinate weight given in the
10 Cited by John A. Vissers, The Neo-Orthodox Theology of W. W. Bryden (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2006), 27. For context see the important research by Friedrich Wilhelm Graf, “Die ‘antihistoristiche Revolution’ in der protestantischen Theologie der zwanziger Jahre,” in Vernunft des Glaubens: Wissenschaftliche Theologie und kirchliche Lehre, ed. Jan Rohls and Gunter Wenz (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1988), 377-405. 11 Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory (Notre Dame: U of Notre Dame P, 1984), 222. Cited by Oldham, “Alister E. McGrath and Evangelical Theories of Doctrinal Development,” 67-68. 12 Orr, PD, 15. See especially McGrath, The Genesis of Doctrine; Kevin Vanhoozer, The Drama of Doctrine: A Canonical-Linguistic Approach to Christian Theology (Louisville: WJK, 2005); Anthony Thistleton, The Hermeneutics of Doctrine (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007). 13 See the Roman Catholic-Reformed Dialogue (First Phase 1970-1977), www.warc.jalb.de/warcajsp/side.jsp?news_id=883&part_id=59&navi=38#17.
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Reformed tradition to the ancient Ecumenical Councils in the transmission and
interpretation of the gospel.” Similarly, some recent Reformed catechisms
own the indispensable role of the church in the formation of doctrine. “Those
who seek to understand the Bible need to stand within the church and listen to
its teaching… We interpret Scripture properly as we compare passages, seeing
the two Testaments in light of each other, and listening to commentators past
and present.”14
At the same time, the regard for church tradition does not rise so high as
to compromise Scripture’s sufficiency or to obscure the “experience of
frequent errors and resistances to the Word on the part of the church.”15 The
Spirit directs the church back to the inscripturated words of its Lord as the
singular source, supreme norm, and final judge of its doctrine and practices.
“But the Counsellor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name,
will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you”
(John 14:26).
This study has contended that the old debate over the relation of
Scripture to tradition provided the lens through which Victorian Presbyterians
first perceived the “new” idea of the development of doctrine, and, secondly,
that this theological foundation remained a point of reference for how they
thought about the historical formation of doctrine (see 1.2). This point of
reference, namely, an ancillary view of Scripture and tradition, permitted an
intrusive voice to confront and criticize church tradition. But the sharp edge on
the Word of God cut somewhat unevenly. Bruce’s Ritschlian-inspired
suspicion of theological tradition was almost fanatical, while Cunningham,
Rainy, and Orr never really took seriously the possibility of substantial
reconstruction of the doctrinal tradition for the sake of contemporary
confession. Modern Reformed theology has reiterated and endorsed the critical
implications of the ancillary view of Scripture and tradition. “Only through the
Bible is the church given a knowledge of Jesus Christ which speaks to it from
outside itself about the one who indwells it. If the church were not so
addressed from outside itself, it would be unable to distinguish the indwelling
14 A Catechism for Today (The Presbyterian Church in Canada, 2004), Q. 66. 15 Roman Catholic-Reformed Dialogue (First Phase 1970-1977).
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Spirit from its own desires.”16 But as with the Victorian theologians looked at
in this study, the methodological principle of ecclesia reformata semper
reformanda secundum verbum Dei serves both “conservative” and “liberal”
Reformed theological agendas.
If Reformed thinking on Scripture and tradition evidences considerable
continuity between the nineteenth century and today, the topic in Roman
Catholicism—the outstanding alternative to the Protestant ancillary view of
Scripture and tradition—has a somewhat more complicated past. It is
worthwhile to quickly revisit this story because of its outstanding ecumenical
implications for contemporary study of the genesis and development of
doctrine.
Modern Roman Catholicism has witnessed a remarkable shift. The
‘supplementary view’ of Scripture and tradition reaffirmed at the First Vatican
Council, with its concomitant belief that Holy Mother Church possesses a
deposit of sacred dogmas formed according to “the unanimous consent of the
fathers” and permanently fixed, has given way to a ‘coincidence view’ of
Scripture and tradition and a theory of the development of dogma (see 1.2.1).17
The hostile conclusion drawn by the Ritschlian historian of dogma Krüger in
the wake of the Council was typical of nineteenth-century Protestantism: “The
Catholic Church knows no history of dogma: where one maintains the
unchangeability of dogma since antiquity and is of the opinion that Papal
infallibility is taught by the Scriptures, there can a history hardly come into
existence worthy of the name.”18 But Krüger’s criticism no longer hits target.
16 Timothy Ward, Word and Supplement: Speech Acts, Biblical Texts, and the Sufficiency of Scripture (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2002), 1. See also John Webster, “On the Clarity of Holy Scripture,” in Confessing God: Essays in Christian Dogmatics (London: T & T Clark, 2005), 33-68. 17 Decrees of the First Vatican Council, “On Revelation,” 8-9; “On Faith and Reason,” 13-14. Compare to the Council’s “Dogmatic Constitution of the Catholic Faith,” 4: “If anyone says that it is possible that at some time, given the advancement of knowledge, a sense may be assigned to the dogmas propounded by the church which is different from that which the church has understood and understands: let him be anathema.” 18 Krüger, Was heißt und zu welchem Ende studiert man Dogmengeschichte?, 18. Leo Scheffczyk, “Katholische Dogmengeschichtsforschung: Tendenzen–Versuche–Resultate,” in Dogmengeschichte und katholische Theologie, ed. Werner Löser et al. (Würzburg: Echter, 1985), 21, contrasts the long history of the study of the development of dogma within Roman Catholicism to the very young discipline of the history of dogma. See also Rahner, “The Development of Dogma,” 43. Scheffczyk and Rahner were hugely influenced by Newman.
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For at the very same time that the Vatican decrees were promulgated a
dissonant note was being sounded within Roman theology. Newman had
argued as an Anglican against Scripture’s sufficiency; a key step on his road to
Rome was the truly radical realization that ‘Antiquity’ was equally
insufficient. The history of the early church discloses no such “unanimous
consent of the Fathers” that could guide the church in interpreting Scripture.
The thrust of his Essay, that “modern Catholicism…is the natural and
necessary development, of the doctrine of the early church,” aimed to solve
the difficulty that Catholic theology at the time of the Vatican Council was not
yet willing to consider, namely, that modern Catholic dogma directly mirrored
neither Scripture nor early church tradition.19
The aftershocks of Newman’s Essay on the old debate over Scripture
and tradition cannot be overestimated. His theory of doctrinal development
simply eliminated the need for an unchanging body of dogma to be housed in
the “written books and unwritten traditions” maintained by Trent and the First
Vatican Council.20 But neither was he simply renewing the ancient
coincidence view of Scripture and tradition. Its proponents had insisted upon
the explicit coincidence of a body of dogma with Scripture in the teaching of
the church. Newman, however, historicized the coincidence of Scripture and
tradition: doctrine coheres implicitly in the church’s grasp of the idea of
revelation—but the wages of time are needed to make it explicit through the
teaching of the church.
As Richard Bauckham argues, the problem for Protestants is that “the
theory of doctrinal development pioneered here by Newman and influential in
various Roman Catholic circles at the time of the Second Vatican Council
tends to place even more weight than its predecessors on the contemporary
teaching of the magisterium as the real norm for Christian doctrine, since what
is implicit in Scripture and earlier tradition reaches its fullest development
here.”21 It would be too much to say, as some of Newman’s Victorian critics
did, that the papacy functions as a deus ex machina in the proffered theory of
19 Newman, Essay, 78. Note: in this Conclusion, all references to the Essay are taken from the 6th edition. 20 Decrees of the First Vatican Council, “On Revelation,” 5. 21 Bauckham, “Tradition in Relation to Scripture and Reason,” 124.
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doctrinal development.22 Yet the formation of the Marian dogmas in modern
Catholicism would seem to indicate that the norm of doctrine has shifted from
Scripture or past tradition to the developing tradition of the church under the
oversight of the papacy.23
So from one angle, Newman’s theory of development appears to have
helped Protestants and Catholics move past the pre-Victorian impasse on
Scripture and tradition. Catholics have abandoned a supplementary oral
tradition; many Protestant churches have formally renounced ‘Bible religion’
for a more wholesome appreciation of church tradition. Further, many
Protestants agree in principle with the Second Vatican Council’s insistence
upon the “close connection between sacred tradition and Sacred Scripture” as
well as the necessary medium of the church in the unfolding of the contents of
divine revelation.24
From another angle, Newman’s theory of development seems to have
exacerbated existing differences. Protestants consider that Rome’s adherence
to a coincidence view of Scripture and tradition cum theory of doctrinal
development leaves its profession of the material sufficiency of Scripture
toothless because it allows no external word to be directed against the
church’s heritage of doctrine from either history or Scripture. To claim as the
Second Vatican Council does that Scripture and the church’s doctrinal
tradition “merge into a unity and tend toward the same end” does not allow
what Barth called “the emancipated Bible, the Bible which confronts the
Church as an authority.”25 From the other side, even the most careful accounts
given to the classic Protestant doctrine of Scripture remain vulnerable to
criticism from Catholics that it cannot avoid the doctrinal indeterminacy that
troubles contemporary Protestantism. As Cunningham anticipated, the
acceptance of the fact of the development of doctrine by Protestants has made
the lack of a centralized authority to guide that development conspicuous.26
22 See the literature cited in chapter 1, footnote 87. 23 See Wilhelm Dantine and Erich Hultsch, “Das Mariendogma,” in HDThG 3, 379-97. 24 Verbum Dei, 9-10. A similar protest to what follows can be made against the World Council of Churches’ Montreal report on tradition, Tradition and Traditions (Geneva: WCC, 1963). 25 Barth, CD 1/1 §7, 257. 26 “Romanist,” 66.
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3. Jesus Christ “The most distinctive and determinative element in modern theology is
what we may term a new feeling for Christ,” began the Scottish
Congregationalist Andrew Fairbairn’s important book The Place of Christ in
Modern Theology (1898).27 And “Christ” was present even as evangelical
Presbyterians in Victorian Scotland investigated the history of dogma. In the
vintage evangelicalism of Cunningham, for example, central doctrines were
those that elaborated upon “the Lamb that once was slain/[who] washed us
from each spot and stain”: election, sin, grace, atonement.28 This oriented his
Historical Theology to the Reformers and the evangelical revivals of the
eighteenth century. The next generation of Scottish Presbyterians, reflecting
the remarkable shift in Victorian religion from the atonement to the
incarnation, began to order and arrange doctrine through an “epistemological
Christocentricism.”29 This was notable in Bruce’s reduction of doctrinal Stoff
to the (almost) exclusive revelation of God in Jesus. He was sounding the
retreat back to the historical Jesus so as to let the synoptic gospels
“Christianize” old dogmas. At the very same time an idealist theologian like
Orr was appealing to the union of the divine and human in Jesus Christ to
argue against the Ritschlian execration of the ‘Hellenization’ of Christianity
for the fittingness of the gospel’s “enfleshment” in the cultural and intellectual
world of the Roman Empire. Clearly, Christology was highly susceptible to a
shifting category of the historical! As such, although evangelical Presbyterians
came to share the general Victorian fascination with the doctrine of the person
of Christ, this foundation could not yield a identical blueprint for theories of
doctrine because FC and UP theologians committed themselves to different
historical epistemologies.
It is significant, however, that all the theologians under consideration
in this study were enthusiastic advocates of the old Presbyterian doctrine of
the headship of Christ over the church that had been revitalized at the time of
27 Fairbairn, The Place of Christ in Modern Theology, 3 28 Horatius Bonar, “Glory be to God the Father” (1866), http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/g/l/glorybet.htm. Even Socinianism was for Cunningham foremost a soteriological rather than Trinitarian heresy (HT, 2: 155-236). 29 The contrast between soteriological and epistemological Christocentricism is made by Richard Muller, “Karl Barth and the Path of Theology into the Twentieth Century: Historical Observations,” WTJ 51 (1989): 25-50.
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the Ten Year’s Conflict (see 1.4.6). This doctrine played an important (if often
implicit) role in broadly shaping how the mainstream of this tradition
connected doctrine with Christ and history.
The introductory chapter marked how Scotland’s antagonistic
relationship with the imperious claims of the British crown had bred a jealous
regard for the “crown rights” of Jesus Christ (see 1.4.1). Against the Erastian
claims of the C of E, the Second Book of Discipline from 1578 insisted on
Christ’s direct rule in the church. “For this power ecclesiasticall flowes
immediatlie from God, and the Mediator Jesus Christ, and is spirituall, not
having a temporall heid on earth, but onlie Christ, the onlie spirituall King and
Governour of his Kirk.”30 It was the evangelical churches of the eighteenth-
century secessions (later merging into the UP), closely followed by the FC in
the Victorian era that developed the doctrine of the spiritual headship of Christ
into a full-blown movement for the disestablishment of the church.31 By
insisting upon an immediate relationship between the King and his church that
bypassed the king, these free churches became flexible toward polity and
doctrine in a way that established churches could not.
The practical implications of this became clear in the wake of the
House of Lords’ 1904 decision to side with a rump group who, rejecting the
1900 church union that created the UFC, sued for the considerable assets of
the former FC on the grounds that they were the true FC because they upheld
the church’s theological position of 1843 [ch.3, 5.4]. To a group of children
Rainy explained what had happened by way of a story of two brothers who
quarrelled over an inheritance and sought mediation from the King of the
Fairies.
And the King of the Fairies…had them both brought before him, and he got a photograph of them both when they were little… And then he said to John, “Oh, this will never do! …Dear me, I think you have got a tail to your coat… You are not right.” But then he looked at Jack, and then he looked at the photograph and he said, “This one’s right. I do believe he has got the very jacket and trousers that he had sixty years ago! …He’s all right; he must get everything. And John is all wrong;
30 “1578 Second Book of Discipline,” in Donaldson, Scottish Historical Documents, 145. 31 A brief survey is provided in Stewart J. Brown, Providence and Empire: Religion, Politics and Society in the United Kingdom, 1815-1914 (Harlow: Pearson, 2008), 262-67.
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he must get nothing.” But he said nothing of the people inside the clothes…32
In Rainy’s mind, the House of Lords was treating the church as a fixed entity
rather than a growing organism. His protest encapsulates the free church
development of the old Presbyterian concern for the immediate spiritual
headship of Jesus Christ over the church. The working thesis developed by
advocates of church union like Rainy, Bruce, and Orr held that the doctrine of
the kingship of Christ left church and doctrine bound only to its Lord and,
consequently, relatively “unbound” to develop in history. The acceptance of
the fact of doctrinal development and the need for confessional revision
among later Victorian evangelical Presbyterians was rooted in part in the
belief that there could be no confusion of the church in history—of an
historical body and its polity, structures, and doctrines—with its perfect and
unique Head. Church history remained profane.
This particular manner of relating Christ to the church abhors what
Cunningham called “vicarious religion,” that is to say, attributing to the
church what belongs only to the church’s Lord—what he predictably
denounced it in current Roman and Anglo-Catholic ecclesiologies. But it was
not only in Rome or Oxford where the church was made a vicar for Christ.33
Chapter 5 amply illustrated how leading conservative German Protestants
drew upon romantic and idealist leitmotifs in order to invest the church with
some of the attributes of Christ (see 5.3). Specifically, the prolongation of the
incarnation into the church made the historical progress of dogma part of the
divine life. “The line of thinking of Kliefoth, Vilmar and the still valuable
Dogmengeschichte from Gottfried Thomasius,” judged Friedrich
Kantzenbach, “points to a structural relationship with the Roman Catholic
judgment on the development of the history of dogma…”34
Given that the incarnation model of the church became very important
in twentieth century ecumenism, especially through the related model of the
32 Simpson, The Life of Principal Rainy, 2: 390; also 404. 33 William Cunningham, “Errors of Romanism,” 11-13. Originally published in The North British Review 17 (1852): 481-518; republished in Discussions on Church Principles, 1-34. 34 Kantzenbach, ED, 160.
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church as a sacrament of Christ,35 perhaps the unfashionable stance of
Victorian Presbyterians can draw attention to the problems inherent in
“vicarious religion” for the study of church history and Dogmengeschichte.36
On one hand, merging the history of the church with the history of Christ fails
to deliver the truly “human” church history it promises. No matter how
authentically “human” was the genesis and development of dogma it remains
under the thumb of the divine Logos. And on the other hand, as Claude Welch
argued, a massive credibility gap is inevitable whenever the attributes of
Christ are bestowed upon the church.
…[W]hile the historical figure of Jesus Christ is such as to make intelligible to faith the conviction that he is the Incarnate Word, the historical life of the church is not evidently such as to make intelligible many of the claims made for it. Certainly it is called to be the people of God and the body of Christ, and it is affirmed to be a holy nation and a royal priesthood, but the call seems to have met with distorted response and the theological claim seems quite inconsistent with the facts of its life.37
The doctrine of the spiritual headship of Christ that figured so pervasively in
the ecclesiastical wrangling of Victorian Scotland (if not always explicitly in
the theologizing about doctrine and history) prompts unsettling questions to
past and contemporary proponents of an incarnational model of the church:
does the conflation of the history of Christ with the history of the church
achieve at best a Eutychian Dogmengeschichte? Can an historian raise critical
questions against the history of dogma only at risk of being a blasphemer?
4. Church One need not accept Kliefoth and Thomasius’ timetable for the
unfolding of dogma (see 5.3) to admit the supreme place accorded
ecclesiology in nineteenth-century Christian thought. A swarm of religious,
social, and political factors had come to the fore in the first half of the century
that threatened the churches’ vested interests. The neo-Lutherans in Germany 35 Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen, An Introduction to Ecclesiology (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2002), 26-30. 36 Orr tottered on the verge of letting the goal of world history—union with Christ—divinize all the processes therein, including that of the history of dogma, but he did not fall. 37 Welch, The Reality of the Church (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1958), 122-23. Cited in Reformed Reader, Vol. 2, ed. George Stroup (Louisville: WJK, 1990), 250.
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and the Tractarians in England were the most high profile champions against
the encroachment of the state on the ancient rights of the national churches
and the ravages of industrialization on the old order upon which the churches’
place in society rested. Along with the fleeting Mercersburg theology in
America, these restorationist movements also decried the corrosive effects of
the evangelicals’ ‘anxious bench’ and pragmatic ecclesiology on the seasoned
piety of pulpit, altar, and catechism (see 2.3.1). Theirs was a vindication of the
church visible—its visible place in society and history, its visible authority,
the visible means of grace.
Within the scope of this dissertation, the Tractarians warrant special
attention for their spirited and sophisticated response to generic Victorian
evangelical thinking about the church. Frank Turner rightly deems Newman as
the most probing critic of evangelical religion of his generation—many of his
criticisms struck at the Protestant bias for the invisible church (see also
1.3.1).38 As Newman put it pithily in one of the Tracts for the Times: “true
doctrine and warm feelings are not enough.” Correct belief and piety require
“the Church visible, with its Bishops, priests, and deacons,” and the visible
gifts of salvation—baptism and Eucharist—which they alone are sanctioned to
dispense.39 Newman changed churches after he wrote those words, but his
obsession with the church visible remained unchanged. Indeed, it sired his
theory of doctrinal development by making the problem of church history
unavoidable. As a real, objective fact in history, the church was “public
property,” and all honest publicans could see that over the centuries the
church’s mind had clearly developed.40
Victorian evangelicals were profoundly troubled by the Essay in part
because their pragmatic emphasis on the invisible church had bred a church
historiography largely uninterested in “that external continuity of name,
profession and communion” that weighed so heavily on its author.41 In fact, as
Cunningham argued in his article “The Errors of Romanism”—a critically
appreciative review of Newman’s old Oxford mentor, the latitudinarian 38 Turner, John Henry Newman, 9. 39 Newman, “No. 11. The Catholic Church,” in Tracts for the Times, Vol. 1, 1-2. 40 Newman, Essay, 1. 41 Ibid., 5. Important in this regard was the widely read church history by Joseph Milner (1743-97). See John Walsh, “Joseph Milner’s Evangelical Church History,” JEH 10 (1959): 174-87.
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Richard Whately (1787-1863)—the principles of Protestantism “tend directly
to counteract” the hallowing of the visible structures of the church “by urging
the necessity of men coming into direct and immediate contact with God
Himself and His word in the matter of their salvation….”42 Moreover, the
classical Protestant doctrine of Scripture was so tightly joined with Victorian
evangelicalism’s partiality for the invisible church that the “problem” of the
historical development of doctrine found no foothold. If Scripture is a
sufficient source of saving doctrine, what need is there to locate a doctrinally
authoritative epoch of the church or to prove the historical continuity of a
system of dogma? Ergo Cunningham’s easy concession to Newman that
Protestantism was not historical Christianity but rather biblical Christianity
(see 2.3.2; 2.4). The church is visible in history to the extent that the faithful
gather close to the lamp of the Word of God. In fact, in the extreme form
encountered with Bruce, the disjunction between biblical ideal and historical
actuality was so great as to turn the entire history of the church into ‘the dark
ages’.43
Victorian evangelical ecclesiology combined an overconfident
Biblicism, a problematic doctrine of God’s secret election of individuals, and
an outdated Christendom model of the church in which a distinction between
believers and nonbelievers seemed imperative.44 It would find few defenders
today amongst Reformed theologians. The ‘Bible religion’ typical of that time,
which left church tradition purely extrinsic to the task of doctrinal formation,
has been formally repudiated by many Reformed churches as unhistorical and
theologically naïve. And recent Reformed thinking on the invisible church is
clearly sensitive to criticism from Catholics and Anabaptists that the
predestinarian basis of their confessional ecclesiology tended, among other
things, to a functional docetism: the “real” church is invisible while the
historically visible church is somewhat less than “real”. Not unlike Rainy and
Orr, contemporary Reformed ecclesiologies strongly disavow popular
42 Cunningham, “Errors of Romanism,” 19. 43 Bruce, Apologetics, 504. 44 E.g. in Cunningham’s New College colleague James Bannerman, the author of their generation’s definitive work on Reformed ecclesiology, The Church of Christ, Vol. 1 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1863), 29-41.
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Protestant tendency to treat the historical visibility of the church as
nonessential.45
This is not the place to scrutinize these fresh Reformed accounts of the
visibility and invisibility of the church—although admittedly even these new
versions remain prone to Catholic criticism that Protestant ecclesiology simply
cannot avoid a sort of historical “occasionalism” of the church visible. The
interest here, once again, is to trace the repercussions of this particular
theological foundation on how the Presbyterian tradition in Victorian Scotland
investigated the historical formation of doctrine. And once again we observe
how different categories of the historical rendered this foundation malleable
for two very different approaches to the history of dogma.
First there is the critical trajectory. Here, the deep distinction between
the church visible and invisible made by Bruce and Cunningham maintained
an eschatological tension between the church in history and the church in
glory. With Cunningham, the emphasis fell on the freedom of the historian to
investigate church history unencumbered by the need to prove that the
eschatological promises Christ made to the church of victory, power, and
glory are necessarily visible over the course of its history.46 The church in
history existed ‘under the cross’. Similarly, for Bruce, the Ritschlian view of
the origins of doctrine to which he broadly adhered underscored church
tradition as the story of the victorious. Doctrines roll forward through history
with the weight of the ages, crushing new thoughts about God and flattening
fresh ways of confessing his truth.47 But are the fittest ideas about God the
best? Do theories of the development of dogma that function as a divinely
ordained course of natural selection own up to the fact that church tradition,
like nature, is red in tooth and claw?
45 Impressive restatements of the Reformed doctrine of the church are: John Webster, “On Evangelical Ecclesiology,” Ecclesiology 1 (2004): 9-35; idem, “The Church as Witnessing Community,” SBET 12 (2003): 21-33; R. Michael Allen, “The Church and the churches: A Dogmatic Essay on Ecclesial Invisibility,” EJT 16 (2007): 113-119; Christian Link, “The Notae Ecclesiae: A Reformed Perspective,” in Toward the Future of Reformed Theology: Tasks, Topics, Traditions, ed. David Willis and Michael Welker (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 239-61. For a Lutheran view on ecclesial invisibility see Wilfried Härle, Dogmatik, 3rd ed. (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2007), 570-72. 46 See especially Cunningham, “Errors of Romanism,” 18-19, 21. 47 See Bruce, Apologetics, 503-6; The Christian Church, passim.
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The eschatological tension in which the church lives dissipates not only
through pretensions to ecclesiastical perfection48 but also through too great a
trust in the genius of history. Orr was especially tempted this way because the
dominance of the organic in his thinking—his century’s dominant category of
the historical49—entailed a sort of ‘all or nothing’ approach in the history of
dogma. “Christianity is, in short, its best apology,” he wrote. “The unfolding
of it as in its essence embracing a view of God, the world, and man, and
bringing a provision for man’s spiritual needs, in which both mind and heart
can rest with fullest satisfaction, is the surest certification of its divine
original.”50 As the organism of Christianity is undoubtedly true, the growth of
that organism also must be true. This means that the dogmatic system of
evangelical orthodoxy must have been present in the past church. Yet how to
account for evangelical standards that clearly were not present as dogma in the
earlier church? Orr’s solution was to submerge a stubbornly absent doctrine
like justification by faith into the unarticulated religious consciousness of the
church past. Hence, “true breach of continuity would have been to adhere, as
the Tridentine Fathers did, to the letter of Catholic dogma against the
consciousness of salvation by grace alone, with which that dogma stood in
contradiction.”51
There is an evident circularity to this line of argumentation.
Evangelicalism is true: therefore the church must always have had evangelical
doctrine (even if it was held in the heart rather than the head). Indeed, an
abiding problem with this “second trajectory” of Dogmengeschichte—be it
Protestant or Catholic—is that by assuming divine sanction on present systems
48 Protestants worry that the remarkable development of Mary in modern Roman Catholic theology as the eschatological icon of the church has tended precisely in this direction. John Paul II’s 1987 encyclical Redemptoris Mater reiterated the Second Vatican Council’s claim “that the Mother of God is already the eschatological fulfilment of the Church: ‘In the most holy Virgin the Church has already reached that perfection whereby she exists without spot or wrinkle (cf. Eph. 5:27)…’.” (Redemptoris Mater, 6, http://www.vatican.va/edocs/ENG0224/__P2.HTM; see also Catechism of the Catholic Church, 967-72). If the bodily-assumed Mary is an eschatological icon of the church, does the church body tend to think of itself as perfect here and now? In regard to the history of dogma: as the church enacts its Mariological function of treasuring up revelation and pondering it in her heart (Luke 2:19), is it possible for “Mary” to err? 49 Stöve, “Zeitliche Differenzierung und Geschichtsbewußtsein in der neuzeitlichen Historiographie,” 30-37. 50 Orr, PD, 322-23. Compare to Newman, Essay, 94: “You must accept the whole or reject the whole; attenuation does but enfeeble, and amputation mutilate.” 51 Ibid., 254.
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of dogma, they are obligated (to use Rahner’s expression) “to discover the
possible from the real.”52 But does not the history of dogma then risk
becoming just a clever justification for what a given church venerates as real?
Within Victorian Presbyterianism’s problematic ecclesiology was a
valuable feature: a refusal in principle to ease the tension between the church
in history, which confesses God’s truth in hope and faith, and the church in
glory, which sees no longer ‘through a glass darkly’ but, finally, face to face.
Some of the theologians looked at in this study intuitively realized—although
it has needed to be teased out—that honest criticism of the system and history
of church dogma can only take place within the eschatological tension of the
visible and the invisible church. This is a key insight born of the Reformation,
although not always adhered to by nineteenth-century Protestants, and by no
means Protestantism’s exclusive possession. “The church is a concrete
historical reality,” wrote Cardinal Kasper. “Under the guidance of God’s
Spirit, it unfolds in history; to history, therefore, we must turn for sound
theology.”53
5. Confessing the Faith [5.1] The evaluation up until this point has summarized the effects of
the rise of an historical consciousness in the nineteenth century upon
Presbyterian foundations of Scripture, Christ, and church. In regard to
Scripture, although many Scottish Presbyterians had a greater esteem for
church tradition at the end of the century than at the beginning, the voice of
tradition was not confused with the voice of God in revelation. In other words,
the history of doctrine was held apart from Scripture. Second, the theologians
assessed in this study shared in the Scottish free church renewal of the
doctrine of the spiritual headship of Christ over the church. By insisting upon
a qualitative gap between the history of Jesus and the history of the church, the
history of doctrine remained merely human. Third, ecclesiology: evangelical 52 Rahner, “The Development of Dogma,” 41. 53 Kasper, “On the Church,” America (23 April 2001), http://www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=1569.
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Presbyterians found the church sometimes more, sometimes less visible in
history in a manner that continued to justify Newman’s charge of historical
superficiality. But the classic Protestant disjuncture between the church as
visible in history and the church as God alone knows it ensured that they could
handle the history of doctrine without having to force “the facts of its life”
(Welch) into lofty dogmatic claims about the church.
How then did the ‘wear and tear’ of history on these foundations
dispose the evangelical Presbyterian tradition in Victorian Scotland to the
study of the genesis of doctrine? Clearly the tendency was to give history a
certain autonomy “over-against” doctrine—a position grounded in theological
foundations themselves characterized by Scripture over against tradition,
Christ over against the church, the invisible church over the visible church.
This result could be seen as wholly negative and, therefore, “typically”
Protestant. Positively considered, however, the Victorian Presbyterian
tradition identified the most vital ingredients for a Protestant historical-
hermeneutic of doctrine, in which Scripture, tradition, and history all have
essential (although unequal) roles in the genesis of doctrine. In sharp contrast
to a “closed hermeneutical circle” (as an Orthodox theologian described his
church’s understanding of Scripture and tradition)54 in which any one of
Scripture, the doctrinal tradition, or history could be marginalized or even
ignored, here, each would maintain a relative independence vis-à-vis the other,
and each would be permitted to “cross question” the other.55 The church forms
doctrine as it listens to the Spirit speaking through Scripture. It “re-embodies”
(Rainy) the meaning of the Bible in a historically particular context, but also
within a historically continuous framework of interpretation. Doctrinal
criticism occurs as the church revisits its past speech about God’s truth to
discern how and where the contextual ‘static’ has affected its re-embodiment
of God’s word. What Bruce called those “simple, naïve questions” of the
biblical narrative are permitted to interrogate the historical development of the
church’s system of doctrine in the name of scriptural fidelity and the needs of
contemporary proclamation.
54 John Breck, Scripture in Tradition: The Bible and its Interpretation in the Orthodox Church (New York: St. Vladimir’s Seminary P, 2001), 10. See also Hugh Cunliffe-Jones, “Scripture and Tradition in Orthodox Theology,” in Holy Book and Holy Tradition, 186-209. 55 The idea of “cross-questioning” was Rainy’s (e.g. DDCD, 215).
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Undoubtedly, only the rudiments of this paradigm come into sight
amongst Victorian Presbyterians. Contemporary Reformed theology needs to
devote sustained attention to the topic of the formation of doctrine in order to
develop these rudiments—and they need to do so with greater consistency
than their Victorian forbearers. In the conservative evangelicalism of
Cunningham, for example, his doctrine of Scripture tended to mute the voice
of tradition and history. The result was a confessionalism devoid of any
authentic awareness into its own historical conditionality. It was an antiquary
of a past epoch of the Reformed church.56 To take another example, the
trademark of conservative synergies of doctrine and history in this era—from
Newman to neo-Lutheranism to Orr—was to appeal to the “organic” nature of
the church to anchor the normative status of doctrine. This tended to reduce to
a formality both history and Scripture’s role in cross-questioning the church.57
Yet the value of such a historical-hermeneutical approach to the study
of doctrine is obvious, perhaps especially for letting history intrude into the
“splendid isolation” (Barth) that occurs when churches pursue dogmatics
without giving outside voices a genuine hearing.58 It would also be timely. The
recent trend to approach the nature of doctrine through hermeneutics, i.e. as
the church’s grammar of faith, has much to offer. But its uninterest in how
doctrine actually came to be silences history’s ability to voice uncomfortable
questions against the doctrinal status quo. The “text absorbs the world, rather
than the world the text.”59 Alister McGrath’s characterization of theories of
doctrine that refuse interrogation from outside the church as “self perpetuating
ideolects” appears justified, if harsh; his alternative should be heard by liberal
and conservative Christian traditions alike.60
While the suggestion, implicit with much Dogmengeschichte, that doctrine is an outmoded form of articulating Christian insights must be regarded as implausible, the assertion that history must be permitted to
56 Some recent examples of this tendency from inside conservative Presbyterianism include R. Scott Clark, Recovering the Reformed Confessions: Our Theology, Piety, and Practice (Phillipsburg: P & R, 2008); Darryl G. Hart, Recovering Mother Kirk (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2003). 57 For this reason Barth suggested Hofmann was only “playing at history” (PT, 598). 58 Barth, CD 1/1 §7, 267. 59 Lindbeck, The Nature of Doctrine, 118. Note that ‘text’ for Lindbeck is the church’s interpretative tradition. 60 McGrath, The Genesis of Doctrine, 29. The quotation below is taken from page 151. McGrath’s work provides a Protestant theory of doctrinal formation very much within the trajectory suggested by the Victorian Presbyterians examined in this study.
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criticize doctrine remains valid, to the point of being of crucial importance in the contemporary task of evaluating and reappropriating the doctrinal heritage of the Christian tradition. The intellectual and historical credentials of this heritage must be investigated, with a view to ascertaining how and why a given doctrine gained its plausibility within the community of faith, and with a view to eliminating those found to be deficient. The ecumenical and apologetic implications of this process are potentially considerable: how many doctrines which divide the churches from one another, or which cause bewilderment to outsiders, owe their origins to presuppositions alien to the gospel? Theology needs its Harnacks, if it is to address such questions.
[5.2] The lengthy quotation from McGrath helpfully raises the issue of
the “ecumenical…implications” of the historical study of doctrine. Given the
diversity of secessionist Presbyterian responses to history’s claims on church
doctrine, it is somewhat surprising that the theologians analysed in this study
seemed to have in sight a clear goal. The historical criticism of doctrine aimed
to contract the inherited body of Reformed dogma to essential articles of faith
around which evangelical Protestants could unite. Consciously or not,
Victorian Presbyterians came to stand in the shadow of attempts in the
seventeenth century to rally together Lutherans and Reformed around
fundamental articles of faith (see 3.4). True, their ecumenical vision was
crimped.61 What Orr referred to as “the great heritage of truth which has come
down to us from the past…and is embodied as the expression of the faith in
the historical creeds in which our Churches rest,” what Rainy designated as
“the substance of the Reformed Faith,” and Bruce simply called “Catholic
Presbyterianism” could be largely assumed given the hegemony of Victorian
evangelicalism and the lingering adherence of Presbyterians to the
Confession.62 Yet their desire for an evangelical catholic faith remains a
worthy aim of the critical examination of the genesis and development of
doctrine.
Late Victorian Scottish Presbyterianism was troubled by especially two
related theological concerns. First was the question of the lack of “relevancy”
61 Although the World Missionary Conference in 1910—and through it the ecumenical movement in the twentieth century—owed something to this humble beginning. See Stanley, The World Missionary Conference, Edinburgh 1910, especially 320-24. 62 See Rainy, DDCD, 67; Orr, PD, 4; Bruce, “Progress in Theology.”
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of traditional church doctrine to a secularizing society. Second was the lack of
unity among Scotland’s fractious Presbyterians.63 For Rainy, Bruce, and Orr,
revisiting the genesis and history of doctrine clearly had an urgent apologetic
element. In a manner not unlike Newman’s second test (continuity),
Presbyterians in the later Victorian period sought the historically durable core
of the church’s faith that could bring Presbyterians and evangelicals in
Scotland together in the unity of faith to defend and commend the gospel to an
age wracked by growing disbelief.
Because all the progenitors in this study evidenced the longstanding
Protestant concern to handle dogma in relation to confessions of faith, the
search for fundamentals directly implicated the Confession.64 Unexpectedly,
the indomitable Cunningham stands (if uneasily) at the headwaters of the late
Victorian surge to revise the Confession. Cunningham professed unflinching
allegiance to the seventeenth-century Reformed confessions, but frankly
admitted the impropriety of burdening all church office-holders with every jot
and tittle of the Reformed symbols. With a touch of dry humour, he reopened
for evangelical Presbyterians the issue of fundamental articles of faith.
When a church is arranging her terms of communion, other considerations, in addition to that of the mere truth of the statements, must be brought to bear upon the question of what it is right, necessary and expedient to do, or of what amount of unity in matters of opinion ought to be required. The principles applicable to this branch of the church’s duty, have never been subjected to a thorough discussion by competent parties, though they are very important in their bearings; and the right application of them is attended with great difficulty. Calvin would probably have made a difficulty about adopting precise and definite deliverances on some points, concerning the truth of which the great Calvinistic divines of the seventeenth century had no hesitation. But it will probably be admitted that he was qualified of the office for a minister in a Calvinistic church, even in this advanced nineteenth century. The great general objects to be aimed at in this matter, though the application is, of course, the difficulty, are embodied in the famous maxim, which Witsius adopted as his favourite motto—‘In necessariis unitas, in non necessariis libertas, in omnibus caritas’.65
63 For an overview see Cheyne, The Transforming of the Kirk, 60-87, 110-156. 64 In reference to Protestant Orthodoxy see Otto Weber, Foundations of Dogmatics, Vol. 1, trans. Darrell Guder (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1981), 28-33. 65 Cunningham, “Calvin and Beza,” 412.
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Cunningham’s call was heard by his tradition. Scottish Presbyterians
pursued the search for unity in necessary doctrines with alacrity in the later
Victorian era. It is important to note how their pursuit of fundamentals was
invigorated by the historicizing of their tradition’s theological foundations.
Nineteenth-century theology’s newfound sense for revelation in history
focussed attention on the plotline of biblical history rather than the Bible’s
encyclopaedic breadth (i.e. what Cunningham called “the mere truth of the
statements”). The result was that doctrine was prioritized according to its
proximity to the centre of the story: Christ. And the partial erosion of
evangelicalism’s habitual disregard for the heritage of the church opened up a
catholic horizon. Truly, the full effects of their rehabilitation of tradition is
detected only when we look beyond the written words of Rainy, Orr, and even
Bruce, to their work in committees, commissions, and church courts to try to
steer their tradition away from local or Presbyterian peculiarities to the ‘great
tradition’ upheld in the Reformed confessions.
In necessariis unitas—“the application is, of course, the difficulty,”
mused Cunningham. Doctrinal criticism for the sake of fundamental Christian
truth is difficult; when pursued through the category of history it is downright
risky. The risk is especially acute for those Christians who partake of
“Christianity’s dangerous idea”—Protestants.66 They cannot predict,
determine, or control the process once it is unleashed. Raising the question of
which doctrines are fundamental and which are not, which parts of the
Christian doctrinal heritage are achievements for the ages and which are not,
necessarily invokes historical and systematic criticism of the genesis of
doctrine. A tradition’s foundational beliefs on revelation, authority, church,
and so forth, which determine in part its dogmatic system, must be reviewed.
Do those foundations still appear hale in the light of deepened or merely
different knowledge and insight? Then, the historical development of doctrine
must be revisited. Do old doctrinal quarrels still hold? Did hot rhetoric in the
past obscure common understandings? What was essential in past confessions
of faith and what were accidents of context? Perhaps what a past generation
66 Alister E. McGrath, Christianity’s Dangerous Idea: the Protestant Revolution—A History from the Sixteenth Century to the Twenty-First (New York: Harper, 2007).
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set up as the articulus stantis vel cadentis ecclesiae, though no less true, has
slipped from the centre to the periphery of Christian experience.
Can this risky process be avoided? On one hand, the global explosion
of Christianity is raising uncomfortable questions as to which parts of the
hoary dogmatic heritage of Christendom need to be accepted as central or
essential by the younger churches of the ‘majority world’. How will
Christianity’s traditional ‘God-talk’ change as it is translated into the cultural
vernacular in Africa, Asia, and elsewhere?67 Missiologists are especially
emphatic about the sheer risk involved in “translating” Christianity into other
cultural vernaculars. When the message of Scripture and the church’s
established doctrinal tradition are interpreted through an almost infinite variety
of cultural specifications, the results can be unpredictable and deeply
disconcerting to established interests.68 Given their theological foundations,
Protestants can be uniquely accommodating of this looming dogmatic
redaction in the global church, even as they keep hope that this process will
enhance rather than eradicate the established consensus fidelum. On the other
hand, the dwindling faithful in the West are aware as never before that a lack
of doctrinal unity has severely compromised the church’s witness. For we who
“live in a world that no longer asks ‘What kind of Christian should I be?’ but
‘Why be Christian at all?’,” an account of the formation of doctrine that can
unite Christians on fundamentals seems imperative.69 To this end, perhaps the
neglected theological labour of two smallish evangelical Presbyterian
denominations in Victorian Scotland can make a humble contribution to
Protestant thinking on the subject.
67 Brian Stanley, “The Reshaping of Christian Tradition: Western Denominational Identity in a Non-Western Context,” in Unity and Diversity in the Church, ed. R. N. Swanson (Oxford: Blackwell, 1996), 399-426, illustrates how questions regarding the viability of western dogmas and church institutions were being raised already on the mission fields of the Victorians. 68 Lamin Sanneh, Translating the Message: The Missionary Impact on Culture (Maryknoll: Orbis Books, 1989); Andrew Walls, The Missionary Movement in Christian History: Studies in the Transmission of Faith (Maryknoll: Orbis, 1996), 26-42. 69 H. Ashley Hall, “The Development of Doctrine: A Lutheran Examination,” Pro Ecclesia 16 (2007): 277.
275
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