Meredith G. Kline
[A
modified version
of Professor Kline's article was originally published in the February, 1994
issue of New Horizons, the denominational magazine of the Orthodox
Presbyterian Church. What follows is the unexpurgated text.]
Recounted in the lore about the founding of our movement
is the stirring testimony of the dying Machen in a telegram sent to John Murray:
"I'm so thankful for active obedience of Christ. No hope without it."
The active obedience of Jesus is his fulfilling the
demands of the covenant probation. By the passive obedience of his atoning
sacrifice he secures for us the forgiveness of sins. But he does more than clear
the slate and reinstate us in Adam's original condition, still facing probation
and able to fail. Jesus, the second Adam, accomplishes the probationary
assignment of overcoming the devil, and by performing this one decisive act of
righteousness he earns for us God's promised reward. By this achievement of
active obedience he merits for us a position beyond probation, secure forever in
God's love and the prospect of God's eternal home.
This grand truth is a fruit of covenant theology. It grows
out of the soil of the Reformed doctrine of federal representation, which is
based on the biblical teaching about the two Adams whose responses under
covenant probation are imputed to those they represent. Thus, God imputes to
those whom Christ represents the righteousness of the victory of his active
obedience in his probationary battle against Satan. Here was Machen's strong
comfort in death. He knew that the meritorious work performed by his Savior had
been reckoned to his account as if he had performed it. God must certainly
bestow on him the glorious heavenly reward, for Jesus had earned it for him and
God's name is just.
Fuller versus Machen's Hope
Opposition to the covenant theology that affords
the believer such a confident hope in Christ is the main burden of Daniel P.
Fuller's latest book, The Unity of the Bible (Zondervan, 1992),
[1] as it was of his Gospel and Law: Contrast or
Continuum? (Eerdmans, 1980). The earlier book answered the question posed in
its title with a vehement "Continuum - no contrast!" The contrast Fuller rejects
is that between grace and the works principle which classic covenant theology
asserts was present in the Law (the old covenant), governing Israel's retention
of the kingdom in Canaan. This tenet of covenant theology is in agreement with
the emphatic teaching of the apostle Paul. [2] Covenant
theologians fully recognize that the eternal salvation of the elect is by God's
grace alone, solely on the basis of Christ's merit. That is true from the Fall
to the Consummation, not excluding the Mosaic economy. Accordingly, the old
covenant is subsumed under the Covenant of Grace. But classic covenant theology
also recognizes that at another level, that of the typological kingdom, the
works principle was simultaneously operating under the old covenant.
[3]
Fuller's refusal to acknowledge a works/grace contrast
between the Mosaic covenant and gospel administrations (preeminently, the new
covenant) is part of his broader insistence that divine-human relationship never
entails a works principle. Human merit is an essential ingredient in the concept
of works and Fuller denies the very possibility of human merit anywhere in
history, even before the Fall. He repudiates covenant theology not only in its
recognition of a works principle in the Law but in its identification of God's
original covenant with Adam as a covenant of works. Fuller claims there is a
continuum of divine "grace" throughout all God's dealings with man, pre-Fall as
well as redemptive.
Because the theology Fuller promotes is in effect an
assault on the foundations of the gospel and because its influence is insidious,
infiltrating even our own theological community, it is important that we all
acquaint ourselves with its distinctive ideas and favorite arguments. Hopefully
our consideration of the issue (intricate though it is) will at the same time
serve to sharpen our understanding of God's justice and grace and to enliven our
appreciation of our Lord's active obedience. [4]
The Eclipse of Divine Justice
Our focus here will not be on Fuller's mishandling
of the Law but on the fallacies of his notions about the pre-Fall covenant. As
covenant theology recognizes, there is a big difference (not a continuum)
between the pre-Fall covenant and the subsequent Covenant of Grace. In the
former, Adam does not receive the kingdom blessings (but rather a curse) if he
forfeits God's favor by disobedience. Under the gospel, on the contrary, we do
receive those blessings in spite of our having forfeited them by sin.
Grace is of course the
term we use for the principle operative in the gospel that was missing from the
pre-Fall covenant. Properly defined, grace is not merely the bestowal of
unmerited blessings but God's blessing of man in spite of his demerits,
in spite of his forfeiture of divine blessings. Clearly, we ought not apply this
term grace to the pre-Fall situation, for neither the bestowal of
blessings on Adam in the very process of creation nor the proposal to grant him
additional blessings contemplated him as in a guilty state of demerit. Yet this
is what Fuller and company are driven to do as they try to create the illusion
of a continuum between the pre-Fall and the redemptive covenants. Only by this
double-talk of using the term grace (obviously in a different sense) for
the pre-Fall covenant can they becloud the big, plain contrast that actually
exists between the two covenants (cf. Rom. 4:4).
Not grace but simple justice was the governing principle
in the pre-Fall covenant; hence it is traditionally called the Covenant of
Works. God is just and his justice is present in all he does. That is true of
gospel administrations too, for the foundation of the gift of grace is Christ's
satisfaction of divine justice. If you are looking for an element of continuity
running through pre-Fall and redemptive covenants (without obliterating the
contrast between them), there it is - not grace, but justice. In keeping with
the nature of God's covenant with Adam as one of simple justice, covenant
theology holds that Adam's obedience in the probation would have been the
performing of a meritorious deed by which he earned the covenanted blessings.
By what reasoning does Fuller disallow the possibility of
meritorious human deeds and thus reject the doctrine of a covenant of works? One
argument is that man cannot add to God's glory since he is already all-glorious;
we cannot enrich God since everything already belongs to him. Do we not read
that even when a man has done all that God requires of him, he is still an
unprofitable servant, that he has done no more than his duty?
The statement of Jesus appealed to (Luke 17:10) does
indeed indicate that we can never do something extra beyond our covenantal
obligations, as a sort of favor for which God should be grateful. But this does
not mean that human works of obedience are of no merit. Though we cannot add to
God's glory, Scripture instructs us that God has created us for the very purpose
of glorifying him. We do so when we reflect back to him his glory, when our
godlike righteousness mirrors back his likeness. Such righteousness God esteems
as worthy of his approbation. And that which earns the favor of God earns the
blessing in which that favor expresses itself. It is meritorious. It deserves
the reward God grants according to his good pleasure. Just as disobedience earns
a display of God's negative justice in the form of his curse, so obedience earns
a manifestation of God's positive justice in the form of his blessing (cf. Rom.
2:6-10; Ps. 62:12; Prov. 24:12). This is simple justice.
At this juncture, advocates of the Fuller approach adduce
a second argument to justify their use of the term grace rather than
works for the pre-Fall covenant. They say that even if it be granted that
Adam's obedience would have earned something, the reward to be bestowed so far
exceeded the value of his act of service that we cannot speak here of simple
justice. We must speak of "grace."
We have already criticized the duplicity of using the term
grace in the covenant with Adam in a sense totally different from the
meaning it has in the gospel. Now we will focus on the denial of the simple
justice of the pre-Fall arrangement. For one thing, the alleged disparity in
value between Adam's obedience and God's blessing is debatable. It could be
argued that insofar as man's faithful act of obedience glorifies God and
gives pleasure to God, it is of infinite value. But the point we really
want to make is that the presence or absence of justice is not determined by
quantitative comparison of the value of the act of obedience and the consequent
reward. All such considerations are irrelevant.
One way to show this is to note the theological trouble we
get into if we let the factor of relative values be the judge of justice. For
example, in the case of the eternal intratrinitarian covenant we would end up
accusing the Father of injustice towards the Son. For the value of the Son's
atonement payment was sufficient for all mankind, yet the Father gives him the
elect only, not all. We can avoid blasphemous charges against the Father only if
we recognize that God's justice must be defined and judged in terms of what he
stipulates in his covenants. Thus, the specific commitment of the Father in the
eternal covenant was to give the Son the elect as the reward of his obedience,
and that is precisely what the Son receives, not one missing. Judged by the
stipulated terms of their covenant, there was no injustice but rather perfect
justice. By the same token there was no grace in the Father's reward to the Son.
It was a case of simple justice. The Son earned that reward. It was a covenant
of works and the obedience of the Son (passive and active) was meritorious.
What is true in the covenant arrangement with the second
Adam will also have been true in the covenant with the first Adam, for the first
was a type of the second (Rom. 5:14) precisely with respect to his role as a
federal head in the divine government. Accordingly, the pre-Fall covenant was
also a covenant of works and there too Adam would have fully deserved the
blessings promised in the covenant, had he obediently performed the duty
stipulated in the covenant. Great as the blessings were to which the good Lord
committed himself, the granting of them would not have involved a gram of grace.
Judged by the stipulated terms of the covenant, they would have been merited by
simple justice.
The Employer Metaphor
Instructive for the concept of justice is the
parable of the workers in the vineyard (Matt. 20:1-16). In particular, it
illustrates the point that in administering a work contract, the amount of the
stipulated wages is irrelevant to the question of justice. Those who worked the
full day challenge the owner of the vineyard when they discover that the same
pay they received was given to others who labored fewer hours. But they were
rebuffed by the reminder that their employer had dealt with them exactly as
their work covenant prescribed. To honor the covenant commitment was justice.
Similarly, the higher rate of pay received by the others did not transform that
transaction into one of "grace." It too was a payment of what was "right" (v.
4). It was simple justice, no more, nothing other than justice.
This parable is also of interest in connection with
another favorite contention of Fuller. He claims that to speak of a works
principle in God-man relationship is to liken God to an employer. And that is
blasphemous, he says, because an employer is a "client lord," one who has needs
which compel him to hire employees, who earn wages from him for meeting those
needs.
A couple of things by way of rebuttal. The rewarding of
obedience is not something done only in an employer-employee relationship. It
takes place in the parent-child relationship too, among others. When the parent
promises the child a reward for doing some chore, that is tantamount to a
covenant of works, and it is a matter of simple justice that the obedient child
receive the covenanted reward. [5] So the doctrine of the
Covenant of Works is not necessarily founded on the metaphor of God as an
employer. The covenant-keeping parent is another option. The king conferring a
royal grant on a loyal subject would be another.
But actually there is no need to refrain from likening God
to an employer. This metaphor which Fuller abominates was used by Jesus himself
in the parable of the vineyard workers (and other parables). As the example of
Jesus' parable demonstrates, metaphors must not be pressed too far and, more
specifically, used of the employer metaphor for God does not imply that God,
like human employers, is a needy client lord dependent on his employees'
services. What we can properly gather from that parable with its employer
metaphor is that the God-man relationship is governed by the principle of divine
justice, including its positive expression in God's granting covenanted rewards
for the performance of stipulated duties. [6] The propriety
of the Covenant of Works doctrine is thereby confirmed.
Subversion of the Gospel
The ultimate refutation of Fuller's theology is
that it undermines the gospel of grace. All the arguments employed by Fuller and
sympathizers to prove that Adam could not do anything meritorious would apply
equally to the case of Jesus, the second Adam. Thus, the Father was already
all-glorious before the Son undertook his messianic mission, and their
covenanting with one another took place, of course, within a father-son
relationship. Moreover, the parallel which Scripture tells us exists between the
two Adams would require the conclusion that if the first Adam could not earn
anything, neither could the second. But, if the obedience of Jesus has no
meritorious value, the foundation of the gospel is gone. If Jesus' passive
obedience has no merit, there has been no satisfaction made for our sins. If
Jesus' active obedience has no merit, there is no righteous accomplishment to be
imputed to us. There is then no justification-glorification for us to receive as
a gift of grace by faith alone.
There are only two consistent choices open to Fuller. He can carry through the
logic of his present position by declaring the work of Jesus to be without merit
and thus abandon the gospel in any recognizably biblical-Reformational form. Or
he can affirm Christ's merit and the gospel - but then he must first recant his
attack on the Covenant of Works.
The actual teaching of those in the Fuller school is an inconsistent mixture.
They want to affirm the atonement accomplished through Jesus' passive obedience
(thereby accepting the idea of negative, punitive justice), but they fail
totally in their handling of his active obedience. There is simply no room in
their system for a divine justice functioning positively in reward of obedience,
no room for an accomplishment of righteousness by anybody that might be imputed
to somebody else. The resultant tendency is to confuse justification and
sanctification in a new legalism, in which the role of good works, which was not
permitted entrance through the front door, now sneaks in the back door. What
Christ could not do is left for us to do, somehow.
The irony of all this is that a position that asserts a continuum of "grace"
everywhere ends up with no genuine gospel grace anywhere. An approach that
starts out by claiming that a works principle operates nowhere ends up with a
kind of works principle everywhere. What this amounts to is a retreat from the
Reformation and a return to Rome.
Fuller and Machen's Heirs
The assault on classic covenant theology of which
Fuller has become a vociferous spokesman is being endorsed by some prominent
leaders within even the broadly Reformed wing of evangelicalism. And the sad
fact is that this theology, which undermines the biblical truths that provided
Machen with his dying comfort, has had its aiders and abettors within the very
movement that Machen founded. Strangely, it was the one who received Machen's
deathbed telegram who opened the door a considerable crack for the views
inimical to the doctrine of the active obedience of Christ.
John Murray's exegetical study of Romans 5 was supportive
of the classic doctrine of imputation, but this was undercut by the recasting of
covenant theology he undertook in the Covenant of Grace (Tyndale Press,
1953). [7] Murray did at least affirm the possibility of
meritorious human work, with obedience receiving a just reward, but he limited
this to a situation where the reward would perfectly balance the value of the
work. (For Murray that meant an obedient Adam must remain in his original state
without advancement.) This qualification restricted the possibility to a
theoretical moment at the beginning before the covenant was superimposed on this
primal state of nature, since on Murray's (mistaken) definition of covenant,
"grace" came with covenant, and that spelled the end of any momentary
hypothetical administration of simple justice.
The door left ajar by Murray was thrown wide open to
Fuller's theology by Murray's successor. Norman Shepherd rightly rejected
Murray's notion of a state of nature. (Such a pre-covenant situation never
existed; the world was created a covenantal order from the outset.) However,
this meant that for Shepherd, who adopted Murray's equation of covenant and
"grace," there was no place at all left for a covenant of works or meritorious
human obedience or simple justice. Though the ensuing controversy over
Shepherd's views led to his departure, his teaching was not officially renounced
by ecclesiastical or seminary arms of our movement, and key elements of the
Fuller-Shepherd theology continue to be advocated among us. [8]
The current intensification of the Fuller crusade awakens
anew our concern over the sympathy for his views that has continued to smolder
within the Machen movement for more than a decade after the Shepherd case. The
church must be alerted against the encroachment of this radical renunciation of
the Reformation, this subtle surrender to Rome. May Machen's heirs not let go of
their commitment to covenant theology but continue to cherish it, and in
particular its precious doctrine of the righteousness secured for us by the
active obedience of Christ. As Machen said: No hope without it!
NOTES
[1] Fuller is a professor at
Fuller Theological Seminary. The present article began as a review of his The
Unity of the Bible.
[2] See, e.g., Acts 13:39; Romans 5:13, 14; 10:5-10; 2
Corinthians 3:6-9; Galatians 3:11-18; 4:21-26; Philippians 3:9.
[3] So, for example, Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology
(Eerdmans, 1981), 2.375.
[4] For more detailed exegetical discussion of passages
central to the controversy, see my "Gospel Until the Law," Journal of the
Evangelical Theological Society 34,4 (1991) 433-446 and my Kingdom
Prologue (Overland Park, KS: Two Age Press, 2001). T. David Gordon, a New
Testament colleague, has demonstrated that Romans 9:32, regarded by Fuller as a
key proof text of his thesis, is on the contrary a straightforward statement of
classic covenant theology's view of the Law. See his "Why Israel Did Not Obtain
Torah-Righteousness: A Translation Note on Rom. 9:32," Westminster
Theological Journal 54,1 (1992) 163-166.
[5] Working with its faulty concept of justice, Fuller
theology alleges that the parent-child relationship is always characterized by
"grace," never by simple justice. The fact that God's covenants with Adam and
Israel involve a father-son relationship is then urged as an argument against
identifying them as works transactions.
[6] I am not suggesting that
this is a central point of the parable but simply noting something implicit in
the parable's metaphorical infrastructure.
[7] Fuller commented on this
with approval in Gospel and Law (pp. 6 and 79, n. 23).
[8] As the following quote
shows, Shepherd himself still adheres to the Fuller line: "But in the kingdom of
God we don't work for rewards in this sense [as earned]. God does not relate to
us as an employer to an employee." (The Outlook 42,3 [1992] 21).
Copyright © 2002
By Meredith G. Kline
Dr. Kline, an OP minister, is professor of Old Testament at
Westminster Theological Seminary in California
and emeritus professor of Old Testament at
Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. This article appeared in
New Horizons, February,
1994.