This essay originally
appeared in The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious
Knowledge, edited by Samuel Macauley Jackson, D.D., LL.D.,
ii. pp. 359-364 (Funk and Wagnalls Company, New York, 1908).
This edition, however, was derived from volume five of The Works
of Benjamin B. Warfield (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House,
1991, pp. 353-366). The electronic edition of
this article was scanned and edited by Shane Rosenthal for Reformation
Ink. It is in the public domain and may be freely copied
and distributed. Pagination from the Baker edition has been retained
for purposes of reference.
THE WORKS OF
BENJAMIN B. WARFIELD, Volume V, page 353
CALVINISM is an ambiguous term
in so far as it is currently employed in two or three senses,
closely related indeed, and passing insensibly into one another,
but of varying latitudes of connotation. Sometimes it designates
merely the individual teaching of John Calvin. Sometimes it designates,
more broadly, the doctrinal system confessed by that body of
Protestant Churches known historically, in distinction from the
Lutheran Churches, as "the Reformed Churches" (see
"Protestantism"); but also quite commonly called "the
Calvinistic Churches" because the greatest scientific exposition
of their faith in the Reformation age, and perhaps the most influential
of any age, was given by John Calvin. Sometimes it designates,
more broadly still, the entire body of conceptions, theological,
ethical, philosophical, social, political, which, under the influence
of the master mind of John Calvin, raised itself to dominance
in the Protestant lands of the post-Reformation age, and has
left a permanent mark not only upon the thought of mankind, but
upon the life-history of men, the social order of civilized peoples,
and even the political organization of states. In the present
article, the term will be taken, for obvious reasons, in the
second of these senses. Fortunately this is also its central
sense; and there is little danger that its other connotations
will fall out of mind while attention is concentrated upon this.
On the one hand, John
Calvin, though always looked upon by the Reformed Churches as
an exponent rather than as the creator of their doctrinal system,
has nevertheless been both
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reverenced as one
of their founders, and deferred to as that particular one of
their founders to whose formative hand and systematizing talent
their doctrinal system has perhaps owed most. In any exposition
of the Reformed theology, therefore, the teaching of John Calvin
must always take a high, and, indeed, determinative place. On
the other hand, although Calvinism has dug a channel through
which not merely flows a stream of theological thought, but also
surges a great wave of human life -filling the heart with fresh
ideals and conceptions which have revolutionized the conditions
of existence -- yet its fountain-head lies in its theological
system; or rather, to be perfectly exact, one step behind even
that, in its religious consciousness. For the roots of Calvinism
are planted in a specific religious attitude, out of which is
unfolded first a particular theology, from which springs on the
one hand a special church organization, and on the other a social
order, involving a given political arrangement. The whole outworking
of Calvinism in life is thus but the efflorescence of its fundamental
religious consciousness, which finds its scientific statement
in its theological system.
2. FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE
The exact formulation
of the fundamental principle of Calvinism has indeed taxed the
acumen of a long series of thinkers for the last hundred years
(e.g., Ullmann, Semisch, Hagenbach, Ebrard, Herzog, Schweizer,
Baur, Schneckenburger, Guder, Schenkel, Schoberlein, Stahl, Hundeshagen;
for a discussion of the several views cf. H. Voigt, "Fundamentaldogmatik,"
Gotha, 1874, pp. 397-480; W. Hastie, "The Theology of the
Reformed Church in its Fundamental Principles," Edinburgh,
1904, pp. 129-177). Perhaps the simplest statement of it is the
best: that it lies in a profound apprehension of God in His majesty,
with the inevitably accompanying poignant realization of the
exact nature of the relation sustained to Him by the creature
as such, and particularly by the sinful creature. He who believes
in God without reserve, and is determined
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that God shall be
God to him in all his thinking, feeling, willing -- in the entire
compass of his lifeactivities, intellectual, moral, spiritual,
throughout all his individual, social, religious relations -
- is, by the force of that strictest of all logic which presides
over the outworking of principles into thought and life, by the
very necessity of the case, a Calvinist. In Calvinism, then,
objectively speaking, theism comes to its rights; subjectively
speaking, the religious relation attains its purity; soteriologically
speaking, evangelical religion finds at length its full expression
and its secure stability. Theism comes to its rights only in
a teleological conception of the universe, which perceives in
the entire course of events the orderly outworking of the plan
of God, who is the author, preserver, and governor of all things,
whose will is consequently the ultimate cause of all. The religious
relation attains its purity only when an attitude of absolute
dependence on God is not merely temporarily assumed in the act,
say, of prayer, but is sustained through all the activities of
life, intellectual, emotional, executive. And evangelical religion
reaches stability only when the sinful soul rests in humble,
self-emptying trust purely on the God of grace as the immediate
and sole source of all the efficiency which enters into its salvation.
And these things are the formative principles of Calvinism.
3. RELATION TO OTHER
SYSTEMS
The difference between
Calvinism and other forms of theistic thought, religious experience,
evangelical theology is a difference not of kind but of degree.
Calvinism is not a specific variety of theism, religion, evangelicalism,
set over against other specific varieties, which along with it
constitute these several genera, and which possess equal rights
of existence with it and make similar claims to perfection, each
after its own kind. It differs from them not as one species differs
from other species; but as a perfectly developed representative
differs from an imperfectly developed representative of the same
species. There are not many kinds of theism, religion, evangelicalism
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BENJAMIN B. WARFIELD, Volume V, page 356
among which men are
at liberty to choose to suit at will their individual taste or
meet their special need, all of which may be presumed to serve
each its own specific uses equally worthily. There is but one
kind of theism, religion, evangelicalism; and the several constructions
laying claim to these names differ from each other not as correlative
species of a broader class, but as more or less perfect, or more
or less defective, exemplifications of a single species. Calvinism
conceives of itself as simply the more pure theism, religion,
evangelicalism, superseding as such the less pure. It has no
difficulty, therefore, in recognizing the theistic character
of all truly theistic thought, the religious note in all actual
religious activity, the evangelical quality of all really evangelical
faith. It refuses to be set antagonistically over against any
of these things, wherever or in whatever degree of imperfection
they may be manifested; it claims them in every instance of their
emergence as its own, and essays only to point out the way in
which they may be given their just place in thought and life.
Whoever believes in God; whoever recognizes in the recesses of
his soul his utter dependence on God; whoever in all his thought
of salvation hears in his heart of hearts the, echo of the soli
Deo gloria of the evangelical profession -by whatever name he
may call himself, or by whatever intellectual puzzles his logical
understanding may be confused - Calvinism recognizes as implicitly
a Calvinist, and as only requiring to permit these fundamental
principles -which underlie and give its body to all true religion
-- to work themselves freely and fully out in thought and feeling
and action, to become explicitly a Calvinist.
4. CALVINISM AND LUTHERANISM
It is unfortunate
that a great body of the scientific discussion which, since Max
Goebel ("Die religiose Eigenthumlichkeit der lutherischen
und der reformirten Kirchen," Bonn, 1837) first clearly
posited the problem, has been carried on somewhat vigorously
with a view to determining the fundamental
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principle of Calvinism,
has sought particularly to bring out its contrast with some other
theological tendency, commonly with the sister Protestant tendency
of Lutheranism. Undoubtedly somewhat different spirits inform
Calvinism and Lutheranism. And undoubtedly the distinguishing
spirit of Calvinism is rooted not in some extraneous circumstance
of its antecedents or origin -- as, for example, Zwingli's tendency
to intellectualism, or the superior humanistic culture and predilections
of Zwingli and Calvin, or the democratic instincts of the Swiss,
or the radical rationalism of the Reformed leaders as distinguished
from the merely modified traditionalism of the Lutherans -- but
in its formative principle. But it is misleading to find the
formative principle of either type of Protestantism in its difference
from the other; they have infinitely more in common than in distinction.
And certainly nothing could be more misleading than to represent
them (as is often done) as owing their differences to their more
pure embodiment respectively of the principle of predestination
and that of justification by faith. The doctrine of predestination
is not the formative principle of Calvinism, the root from which
it springs. It is one of its logical consequences, one of the
branches which it has inevitably thrown out. It has been firmly
embraced and consistently proclaimed by Calvinists because it
is an implicate of theism, is directly given in the religious
consciousness, and is an absolutely essential element in evangelical
religion, without which its central truth of complete dependence
upon the free mercy of a saving God can not be maintained. And
so little is it a peculiarity of the Reformed theology, that
it underlay and gave its form and power to the whole Reformation
movement; which was, as from the spiritual point of view, a great
revival of religion, so, from the doctrinal point of view, a
great revival of Augustinianism. There was accordingly no difference
among the Reformers on this point: Luther and Melanchthon and
the compromising Butzer were no less jealous for absolute predestination
than Zwingli and Calvin. Even Zwingli could not surpass Luther
in sharp and unqualified assertion of it: and it was not Calvin
but Melanchthon
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who gave it a formal
place in his primary scientific statement of the elements of
the Protestant faith (cf. Schaff, "Creeds," i. 1877,
p. 451; E. F. Karl Miller, "Symbolik," Erlangen and
Leipzig, 1896, p. 75; C. J. Niemijer, "De Strijd over de
Leer der Praedestinatie in de IXde Eeuw," Groningen, 1889,
p. 21; H. Voigt, "Fundamentaldogmatik," Gotha, 1874,
pp. 469-470). Just as little can the doctrine of justification
by faith be represented as specifically Lutheran. Not merely
has it from the beginning been a substantial element in the Reformed
faith, but it is only among the Reformed that it has retained
or can retain its purity, free from the tendency to become a
doctrine of justification on account of faith (cf. E. Bohl, "Von
der Rechtfertigung durch den Glauben," Leipzig, 1890). Here,
too, the difference between the two types of Protestantism is
one of degree, not of kind (cf. C. P. Krauth, "The Conservative
Reformation and its Theology," Philadelphia, 1872). Lutheranism,
the product of a poignant sense of sin, born from the throes
of a guilt-burdened soul which can not be stilled until it finds
peace in God's decree of justification, is apt to rest in this
peace; while Calvinism, the product of an overwhelming vision
of God, born from the reflection in the heart of man of the majesty
of a God who will not give His glory to another, can not pause
until it places the scheme of salvation itself in relation to
a complete world-view, in which it becomes subsidiary to the
glory of the Lord God Almighty. Calvinism asks with Lutheranism,
indeed, that most poignant of all questions, What shall I do
to be saved? and answers it as Lutheranism answers it. But the
great question which presses upon it is, How shall God be glorified?
It is the contemplation of God and zeal for His honor which in
it draws out the emotions and absorbs endeavor; and the end of
human as of all other existence, of salvation as of all other
attainment, is to it the glory of the Lord of all. Full justice
is done in it to the scheme of redemption and the experience
of salvation, because full justice is done in it to religion
itself which underlies these elements of it. It begins, it centers,
it ends with the vision of God in His glory: and it sets itself
before all things to render to God His rights in every sphere
of life- activity.
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5. SOTERIOLOGY OF
CALVINISM
One of the consequences
flowing from this fundamental attitude of Calvinistic feeling
and thought is the high supernaturalism which informs alike its
religious consciousness and its doctrinal construction. Calvinism
would not be badly defined, indeed, as the tendency which is
determined to do justice to the immediately supernatural, as
in the first, so also in the second creation. The strength and
purity of its belief in the supernatural Fact (which is God)
saves it from all embarrassment in the face of the supernatural
act (which is miracle). In everything which enters into the process
of redemption it is impelled by the force of its first principle
to place the initiative in God. A supernatural revelation, in
which God makes known to man His will and His purposes of grace;
a supernatural record of this revelation in a supernaturally
given book, in which God gives His revelation permanency and
extension - such things are to the Calvinist almost matters of
course. And, above all, he can but insist with the utmost strenuousness
on the immediate supernaturalness of the actual work of redemption
itself, and that no less in its application than in its impetration.
Thus it comes about that the doctrine of monergistic regeneration
-- or as it was phrased by the older theologians, of "irresistible
grace" or "effectual calling" -- is the hinge
of the Calvinistic soteriology, and lies much more deeply embedded
in the system than the doctrine of predestination itself which
is popularly looked upon as its hall-mark. Indeed, the soteriological
significance of predestination to the Calvinist consists in the
safeguard it affords to monergistic regeneration -- to purely
supernatural salvation. What lies at the heart of his soteriology
is the absolute exclusion of the creaturely element in the initiation
of the saving process, that so the pure grace of God may be magnified.
Only so could he express his sense of man's complete dependence
as sinner on the free mercy of a saving God; or extrude the evil
leaven of Synergism (q.v.) by which, as he clearly sees, God
is robbed of His glory and man is encouraged to think that he
owes to some power, some
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act of choice, some
initiative of his own, his participation in that salvation which
is in reality all of grace. There is accordingly nothing against
which Calvinism sets its face with more firmness than every form
and degree of autosoterism. Above everything else, it is determined
that God, in His Son Jesus Christ, acting through the Holy Spirit
whom He has sent, shall be recognized as our veritable Saviour.
To it sinful man stands in need not of inducements or assistance
to save himself, but of actual saving; and Jesus Christ has come
not to advise, or urge, or induce, or aid him to save himself,
but to save him. This is the root of Calvinistic soteriology;
and it is because this deep sense of human helplessness and this
profound consciousness of indebtedness for all that enters into
salvation to the free grace of God is the root of its soteriology
that to it the doctrine of election becomes the cor cordis of
the Gospel. He who knows that it is God who has chosen him and
not he who has chosen God, and that he owes his entire salvation
in all its processes and in every one of its stages to this choice
of God, would be an ingrate indeed if he gave not the glory of
his salvation solely to the inexplicable elective love of God.
6. CONSISTENT DEVELOPMENT
OF CALVINISM
Historically the Reformed
theology finds its origin in the reforming movement begun in
Switzerland under the leadership of Zwingli (1516). Its fundamental
principles are already present in Zwingli's teaching, though
it was not until Calvin's profound and penetrating genius was
called to their exposition that they took their ultimate form
or received systematic development. From Switzerland Calvinism
spread outward to France, and along the Rhine through Germany
to Holland, eastward to Bohemia and Hungary, and westward, across
the Channel, to Great Britain. In this broad expansion through
so many lands its voice was raised in a multitude of confessions;
and in the course of the four hundred years which have elapsed
since its first formulation, it has been expounded in a vast
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body of dogmatic treatises.
Its development has naturally been much richer and far more many-sided
than that of the sister system of Lutheranism in its more confined
and homogeneous environment; and yet it has retained its distinctive
character and preserved its fundamental features with marvelous
consistency throughout its entire history. It may be possible
to distinguish among the Reformed confessions, between those
which bear more and those which bear less strongly the stamp
of Calvin's personal influence; and they part into two broad
classes, according as they were composed before or after the
Arminian defection (ca. 1618) and demanded sharper definitions
on the points of controversy raised by that movement (see "
Arminius, Jacobus, and Arminianism"; "Remonstrants").
A few of them written on German soil also bear traces of the
influence of Lutheran conceptions. And, of course, no more among
the Reformed than elsewhere have all the professed expounders
of the system of doctrine been true to the faith they professed
to expound. Nevertheless, it is precisely the same system of
truth which is embodied in all the great historic Reformed confessions;
it matters not whether the document emanates from Zurich or Bern
or Basel or Geneva, whether it sums up the Swiss development
as in the second Helvetic Confession, or publishes the faith
of the National Reformed Churches of France, or Scotland, or
Holland, or the Palatinate, or Hungary, Poland, Bohemia, or England;
or republishes the established Reformed doctrine in opposition
to new contradictions, as in the Canons of Dort (in which the
entire Reformed world concurred), or the Westminster Confession
(to which the whole of Puritan Britain gave its assent), or the
Swiss Form of Consent (which represents the mature judgment of
Switzerland upon the recently proposed novelties of doctrine).
And despite the inevitable variety of individual points of view,
as well as the unavoidable differences in ability, learning,
grasp, in the multitude of writers who have sought to expound
the Reformed faith through these four centuries -- and the grave
departures from that faith made here and there among them --
the great stream of Reformed dogmatics has flowed essentially
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unsullied, straight
from its origin in Zwingli and Calvin to its debouchure, say,
in Chalmers and Cunningham and Crawford, in Hodge and Thornwell
and Shedd.
7. VARIETIES OF CALVINISM
It is true an attempt
has been made to distinguish two types of Reformed teaching from
the beginning; a more radical type developed under the influence
of the peculiar teachings of Calvin, and a (so-called) more moderate
type, chiefly propagating itself in Germany, which exhibits rather
the influence, as was at first said (Hofstede de Groot, Ebrard,
Heppe), of Melanchthon, or, in its more recent statement (Gooszen),
of Bullinger. In all that concerns the essence of Calvinism,
however, there was no difference between Bullinger and Calvin,
German and Swiss: the Heidelberg Catechism is no doubt a catechism
and not a confession, but in its presuppositions and inculcations
it is as purely Calvinistic as the Genevan Catechism or the catechisms
of the Westminster Assembly. Nor was the substance of doctrine
touched by the peculiarities of method which marked such schools
as the so-called Scholastics (showing themselves already in Zanchius,
d. 1590, and culminating in theologians like Alsted, d. 1638,
and Voetius, d. 1676); or by the special modes of statement which
were developed by such schools as the so-called Federalists (e.g.,
Cocceius, d. 1669, Burman, d. 1679, Wittsius, d. 1708; cf. Diestel,
"Studien zur Foderaltheologie," in Jahrbucher fur deutsche
Theologie, x. 1865, pp. 209-276; G. Vos, "De Verbondsleer
in de Gereformeerde Theologie," Grand Rapids, 1891; W. Hastie,
"The Theology of the Reformed Church," Edinburgh, 1904,
pp. 189-210). The first serious defection from the fundamental
conceptions of the Reformed system came with the rise of Arminianism
in the early years of the seventeenth century (Arminius, Uytenbogaert,
Episcopius, Limborch, Curcellaeus); and the Arminian party was
quickly sloughed off under the condemnation of the whole Reformed
world. The five points of its " Remonstrance" against
the Calvinistic system (see "Remonstrants")
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were met by the reassertion
of the fundamental doctrines of absolute predestination, particular
redemption, total depravity, irresistible grace, and the perseverance.
of the saints (Canons of the Synod of Dort). The first important
modification of the Calvinistic system which has retained a position
within its limits was made in the middle of the seventeenth century
by the professors of the French school at Saumur, and is hence
called Salmurianism; otherwise Amyraldism, or hypothetical universalism
(Cameron, d. 1625, Amyraut, d. 1664, Placaeus, d. 1655, Testardus,
d. ca. 1650; see "Amyraut, Moise"). This modification
also received the condemnation of the contemporary Reformed world,
which reasserted with emphasis the importance of the doctrine
that Christ actually saves by His spirit all for whom He offers
the sacrifice of His blood (e.g., Westminster Confession, Swiss
Form of Consent).
8. SUPRALAPSARIANISM
AND INFRALAPSARIANISM
If " varieties
of Calvinism " are to be spoken of with reference to anything
more than details, of importance in themselves no doubt, but
of little significance for the systematic development of the
type of doctrine, there seem not more than three which require
mention: supralapsarianism, infralapsarianism, and what may perhaps
be called in this reference, postredemptionism; all of which
(as indeed their very names import) take their start from a fundamental
agreement in the principles which govern the system. The difference
between these various tendencies of thought within the limits
of the system turns on the place given by each to the decree
of election, in the logical ordering of the " decrees of
God." The supralapsarians suppose that election underlies
the decree of the fall itself ; and conceive the decree of the
fall as a means for carrying out the decree of election. The
infralapsarians, on the other hand, consider that election presupposes
the decree of the fall, and hold, therefore, that in electing
some to life God has mankind as a massa perditionis in mind.
The extent of the
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difference between
these parties is often, indeed usually, grossly exaggerated:
and even historians of repute are found representing infralapsarianism
as involving, or at least permitting, denial that the fall has
a place in the decree of God at all: as if election could be
postposited in the ordo decretorum to the dedecree of the fall,
while it was doubted whether there were any decree of the fall;
or as if indeed God could be held to conceive men, in His electing
decree, as fallen, without by that very act fixing the presupposed
fall in His eternal decree. In point of fact there is and can
be no difference among Calvinists as to the inclusion of the
fall in the decree of God: to doubt this inclusion is to place
oneself at once at variance with the fundamental Calvinistic
principle which conceives all that comes to pass teleologically
and ascribes everything that actually occurs ultimately to the
will of God.
9. POSTREDEMPTIONISM
Accordingly even the
postredemptionists (that is to say the Salmurians or Amyraldians)
find no difficulty at this point. Their peculiarity consists
in insisting that election succeeds, in the order of thought,
not merely the decree of the fall but that of redemption as well,
taking the term redemption here in the narrower sense of the
impetration of redemption by Christ. They thus suppose that in
His electing decree God conceived man not merely as fallen but
as already redeemed. This involves a modified doctrine of the
atonement from which the party has received the name of Hypothetical
Universalism, holding as it does that Christ died to make satisfaction
for the sins of all men without exception if -- if, that is,
they believe: but that, foreseeing that none would believe, God
elected some to be granted faith through the effectual operation
of the Holy Spirit. The indifferent standing of the postredemptionists
in historical Calvinism is indicated by the treatment accorded
it in the historical confessions. It alone of the " varieties
of Calvinism " here mentioned has been made the object of
formal confessional condemnation; and it received condemnation
in every important
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Reformed confession
written after its development. There are, it is true, no supralapsarian
confessions: many, however, leave the questions which divide
supralapsarian and infralapsarian wholly to one side and thus
avoid pronouncing for either; and none is polemically directed
against supralapsarianism. On the other hand, not only does no
confession close the door to infralapsarianism, but a considerable
number explicitly teach infralapsarianism which thus emerges
as the typical form of Calvinism. That, despite its confessional
condemnation, postredemptionism has remained a recognized form
of Calvinism and has worked out a history for itself in the Calvinistic
Churches (especially in America) may be taken as evidence that
its advocates, while departing, in some important particulars,
from typical Calvinism, have nevertheless remained, in the main,
true to the fundamental postulates of the system. There is another
variety of postredemptionism, however, of which this can scarcely
be said. This variety, which became dominant among the New England
Congregationalist churches about the second third of the nineteenth
century (e.g., N. W. Taylor, d. 1858; C. G. Finney, d. 1875;
E. A. Park, d. 1900; see "New England Theology"), attempted,
much after the manner of the "Congruists" of the Church
of Rome, to unite a Pelagian doctrine of the will with the Calvinistic
doctrine of absolute predestination. The result was, of course,
to destroy the Calvinistic doctrine of "irresistible grace,"
and as the Calvinistic doctrine of the "satisfaction of
Christ" was also set aside in favor of the Grotian or governmental
theory of atonement, little was left of Calvinism except the
bare doctrine of predestination. Perhaps it is not strange, therefore,
that this "improved Calvinism" has crumbled away and
given place to newer and explicitly anti- Calvinistic constructions
of doctrine (cf. Williston Walker, in AJT, April, 1906, pp. 204
sqq.).
10. PRESENT FORTUNES
OF CALVINISM
It must be confessed
that the fortunes of Calvinism in general are not at present
at their flood. In America, to be sure,
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the controversies
of the earlier half of the nineteenth century compacted a body
of Calvinistic thought which gives way but slowly: and the influence
of the great theologians who adorned the Churches during that
period is still felt (especially Charles Hodge, 1797-1878, Robert
J. Breckinridge, 1800-1871, James H. Thornwell, 1812-1862, Henry
B. Smith, 1815- 1877, W. G. T. Shedd, 1820-1894, Robert L. Dabney,
1820-1898, Archibald Alexander Hodge, 1823-1886). And in Holland
recent years have seen a notable revival of the Reformed consciousness,
especially among the adherents of the Free Churches, which has
been felt as widely as Dutch influence extends, and which is
at present represented in Abraham Kuyper and Herman Bavinck,
by a theologian of genius and a theologian of erudition worthy
of the best Reformed traditions. But it is probable that few
" Calvinists without reserve " exist at the moment
in Frenchspeaking lands: and those who exist in lands of German
speech and Eastern Europe appear to owe their inspiration directly
to the teaching of Kohlbrugge. Even in Scotland there has been
a remarkable decline in strictness of construction ever since
the days of William Cunningham and Thomas J. Crawford (cf. W.
Hastie, "The Theology of the Reformed Church," Edinburgh,
1904, p. 228). Nevertheless, it may be contended that the future,
as the past, of Christianity itself is bound up with the fortunes
of Calvinism. The system of doctrine founded on the idea of God
which has been explicated by Calvinism, strikingly remarks W.
Hastie ("Theology as Science," Glasgow, 1899, pp. 97-98),
"is the only system in which the whole order of the world
is brought into a rational unity with the doctrine of grace.
. . . It is only with such a universal conception of God, established
in a living way, that we can face, with hope of complete conquest,
all the spiritual dangers and terrors of our time. . . . But
it is deep enough and large enough and divine enough, rightly
understood, to confront them and do battle with them all in vindication
of the Creator, Preserver, and Governor of the world, and of
the Justice and Love of the Divine Personality." See "Five
Points of Calvinism."
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