“The gift of the Westminster Standards to the world”

Aside

[I]f I were to essay to express in one word what it is in [the Westminster Standards] which has proved so perennial a source of strength to generation after generation of Christian men, and which causes us still to cling to them with a devotion no less intelligent than passionate, I think I should but voice your own conviction were I to say that it is because these precious documents appeal to us as but the embodiment in fitly chosen language of the pure gospel of the grace of God.

—Benjamin B. Warfield, The Significance of the Westminster Standards as a Creed: An Address Delivered before the Presbytery of New York, November 8, 1897, on the occasion of the celebration of the Two Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of the Completion of the Westminster Standards (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1898), 1, 2.

Sermons of Rutherford, Gillespie, Baillie and Henderson — Smyth sewn, hardback reprint

Aside

Chris Coldwell and his Naphtali Press are up to it again: reprinting classic Presbyterian literature in a suitable and long-lasting style. This time it is the Sermons of Rutherford, Gillespie, Baillie and Henderson.

Long live the Smyth sewn book. Long live the truth.

Review of Charles Hodge: Guardian of American Orthodoxy by Paul C. Gutjahr

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Charles Hodge’s (1797—1878) long, colorful, and sophisticated career as Princeton Seminary’s third professor and grandfather of American systematic theology deserves a thorough, wide-ranging, and intelligent analysis. Paul Gutjahr ably provides such an analysis in his new biography: Charles Hodge: Guardian of American Orthodoxy.

Lengthy, yet not prolix

With short chapters averaging between five to seven pages, this 385-page biography reads more like a novel than non-fiction. And thanks to Gutjahr’s organizational accumen, narrative skill, and mastery of Hodge’s massive corpus, the book reads quickly without sacrificing depth. He carefully prepares the narrative canvas early on with Hodge’s key intellectual themes and personality traits so that, as the chronologically-arranged narrative unfolds, issues in the foreground of each chapter sit comfortably against a proportionate background. Upon completing the book, the reader leaves with the satisfying sense that he or she has just spent several enjoyable afternoons in Hodge’s famous study listening to him narrate his life and times to his closest colleagues. This is American religious social history par excellence.

Colorful, yet not caricatural

Gutjahr weaves together the threads of Hodge’s non-theological passions and hobbys (farming, anatomy, medicine, politics, and modern science in general) with the threads of his theological pursuits in order to display the coat of many colors that is Hodge’s intellectual life. At the same time, he spends much effort in illuminating Hodge’s socio-political context in order to demonstrate how various times and events—especially the Civil War—profoundly shaped Hodge’s theological formulations and political views. Thus he shows Hodge to be a colorful intellectual who is both too complex for simplistic, ahistorical theological dismissals and too much man of his nineteenth-century times to allow for ahistorical repristinations of his theology straight into the twenty-first century.

Sophisticated, but one-sided at points

Even though Gutjahr employs the socio-historical method in exemplary fashion and illuminates Hodge’s thought in many useful ways, his method nevertheless invites shallowness in some of his theological assessments. Throughout the book the reader is given the tacit impression that Hodge’s theological views are almost exclusively the results of his stubborn disposition plus his educational background plus his philosophical context plus this or that. While no one would dispute that all of these sociological factors certainly make the man, a very important and foundational aspect of Hodge’s life is too often swallowed up by overemphasizing socio-historical analysis, namely, that he actually believed that the Bible is truly God’s Word and that the Westminster Standards provide the best summary of the Bible’s doctrine.

By reversing, albeit tacitly, the relationship between doctrine and life, text and context, belief and action, Gutjahr risks skewing one of the most basic facts of Hodge’s life: he lived, learned, led, and loved as a Presbyterian. However, if Hodge is not allowed to be a free-thinking Christian who built his life upon true doctrine rather than vice versa, then he has become a puppet, a mere product of the nineteenth-century rather than an actor in it. Thankfully, this sentiment only rears its head here and there throughout the book, and only implicitly. But, it is a methodological danger nonetheless.

A few unsubstantiated, albeit mostly minor, assessments are difficult to pass by without comment such as that Hodge differed significantly with Calvin regarding the nature of the sacraments or that Hodge waffled between reliance upon the Holy Spirit and reliance upon philosophical realism. Also, given that Gutjahr brings up the topic of Scottish Common Sense Realism time and again as a cornerstone of Hodge’s theological method (second only to the Westminster Confession of Faith), it was disappointing to find that the chapter devoted to this topic is based primarily on secondary sources and lacks the broad and deep perspective that Gutjahr normally and ably brings to bear upon most other aspects of Hodge’s thought.

Despite these small criticisms, Gutjahr’s biography is excellent and a delight to read. American Presbyterians will rejoice that Hodge has received the thorough and skillful treatment that his life and work deserve.

The first duty of an exegete—piety

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The moral qualifications of an Interpreter of Scripture may all be included in Piety; which embraces humility, candor, and those views and feelings which can only result from the inward operation of the Holy Spirit.

It is the object of this discourse to illustrate the importance of Piety in the Interpretation of Scripture.

— Charles Hodge, the opening lines from his inaugural address as Professor of Oriental and Biblical Literature at Princeton Seminary as cited in The Life of Charles Hodge, A. A. Hodge, (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1880), 94; freely available via Google Books.

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The cry of faith: “Lord, help my unbelief!”

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There are some hymns which did good service in my young days, which have since lost favor. “‘Tis a point I long to know,” “Come, humble sinner, in whose breast,” are now regarded as too hypothetical. “I can but perish if I go.” There is no if in the case. However this may be in logic, it should be remembered that there is a faith which saves, which cannot recognize, much less avow itself. Many get to heaven who can only say, “Lord, help my unbelief;” for that is a cry of faith.

— Charles Hodge,  ”Autobiography”  in The Life of Charles Hodge, A. A. Hodge, 1–38 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1880), 31; freely available via Google Books.

Catechesis at the College of New Jersey

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We were also required to commit the Shorter Catechism to memory in Latin. The Episcopal students were allowed to study their own catechism. As that is shorter than the Westminster, many Presbyterians passed themselves off for the time being as Episcopalians. The doctor, to be even with them, required all who took the Episcopal Catechism, to prepare also for examination the Thirty-nine Articles.

– Charles Hodge,  ”Autobiography”  in The Life of Charles Hodge, A. A. Hodge, 1–38 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1880), 23; freely available via Google Books.

How the times change. My Alma Mater required an exam (in English, of course) on a mere 35-question précis of the Shorter Catechism.

On preoccupation with method

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. . . it is no disparagement to logic as a science or an art, to say, that the excessive study how to reason often impairs the ability to reason. The best way to make a man a good carpenter is not to confine his attention to his tools, but to set him to work. So, as has often been said, the best way to make a logician is to set him to study Euclid, or, as any old student of Princeton Seminary would say, set him to study Turrettin.

– Charles Hodge,  ”Autobiography”  in The Life of Charles Hodge, A. A. Hodge, 1–38 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1880), 24; freely available via Google Books.

Free Book Friday No. 2: Planting, Watering, and Growing

Planting, Watering, and Growing: Planting Confessionally Reformed Churches in the 21st Century — eds. Danny Hyde and Shane Lems

Pardon my posting only a partial free book once again. (Lots of full free books are on the way, I promise–stay tuned!) Nevertheless, I have a good excuse for another partial: the free downloadable portion includes an excellent essay by my pastor, Rev. Brian Vos of Trinity URC: ”The Fruitful Grain of Wheat.” He argues that, according to the Apostle John, clearly discerning the interrelationship between Christ’s humiliation and exaltation is the vital root by which a church plant receives its spiritual life and power.

Also included in the free download are:

  • “Forward: Was the Reformation Mission-Minded?,” by Michael Horton,
  • and “Introduction,” by Daniel Hyde and Shane Lems.

The confessional approach to church planting is an historically significant voice that deserves a serious hearing in contemporary Protestant discussions about what a church is and how to start one properly. Planting, Watering, and Growing is a timely collection of essays by Reformed pastors and theologians who themselves are on the front lines of church planting, practicing what they preach.

“Time cannot change Him in His love” — Rutherford Thursdays No. 41

Samuel RutherfordTo Lady Gaitgirth

(Her husband, to whom Rutherford expresses his obligations at the close of the letter, was Sheriff of Ayrshire and represented it in the Scottish Parliament. He was one of three commissioners sent by Parliament on behalf of the Covenant to Newcastle in 1641. In 1649 he commanded a troop of Horse.)

Mistress,

I long to know how matters stand betwixt Christ and your soul. Time cannot change Him in His love. Ye yourself may ebb and flow, rise and fall, wax and wane; but your Lord is this day as He was yesterday. And it is your comfort that your salvation is not rolled upon wheels of your own making, neither have ye to do with a Christ at your own shaping.

God has singled out a Mediator, strong and mighty: if ye and your burdens were as heavy as ten hills or hells, He is able to bear you, and to save you to the uttermost. Your often seeking to Him cannot make you a burden to Him. I know that Christ compassioneth you, and maketh a moan for you, in all your dumps, and under your down castings; but it is good for you that He hideth Himself sometimes.

It is not niceness, dryness, nor coldness of love, that causeth Christ to withdraw, and slip in under a curtain and a vail, that ye cannot see Him; but He knoweth that ye could not bear with upsails, a fair gale, a full moon, and a high spring-tide of His felt love, and always a fair summer-day and a summer-sun of a felt and possessed and embracing Lord Jesus. His kisses and His visits to His dearest ones are thin-sown. He could not let out His rivers of love upon His own, but these rivers would be in hazard of loosening a young plant at the root; and He knoweth this of you. Ye should, therefore, frist Christ’s kindness, as to its sensible and full manifestations, till ye and He be above sun and moon. That is the country where ye will be enlarged for that love which ye dow not now contain.

Cast the burden of your sweet babes upon Christ, and lighten your heart, by laying your all upon Him: He will be their God. I hope to see you up the mountain yet, and glad in the salvation of God.

Frame yourself for Christ, and gloom not upon His cross. I find Him so sweet, that my love, suppose I would charge it to remove from Christ, would not obey me: His love has stronger fingers than to let go its grips of us bairns, who cannot go but by such a hold as Christ. It is good that we want legs of our own, since we may borrow from Christ; and it is our happiness that Christ is under an act of cautionary for heaven, and that Christ is booked in heaven as the principal debtor for such poor bodies as we are.

I request you, give the laird, your husband, thanks for his care of me, in that he has appeared in public for a prisoner of Christ. I pray and write mercy, and peace, and blessings to him and his.

Grace, grace be with you for ever.

Aberdeen,  1637

About “Rutherford Thursdays”

Rutherford Reads

Brief: Ordained Servant Vol. 18, 2009

The 2009 print edition of Ordained Servant is another quality addition to an impressive denominational journal. I particularly enjoyed the two pre-General-Assembly lectures:

First, “Calvin’s Soteriology: The Structure of the Application of Redemption in Book Three of the Institutes,” by Richard B. Gaffin, Jr., brings some helpful clarification on what is exactly being claimed and not claimed in the debates over whether and in what senses the unio mystica is prior to the duplex gratia.

There are several related articles and reviews in this edition (e.g., see the further contributions by Gaffin and Fesko), thus the debate is obviously one of the main themes of this issue. In my opinion, the debate (or, at least the published bits of the debate in OS) has not yet distinguished the historical question from the dogmatic question. It is one thing to make a claim about what Calvin said; it is another to claim that Reformed theology ought to hold a particular dogma, or reassess its value, etc. I think we are far from the latter, yet perhaps making headway on the former.

Second, “John Calvin: Servant of the Word,” by Glen J. Clary, is a fascinating lecture on the Genevan pastor’s view of preaching. Clary draws out particularly important insights into the kerygmatic presence of Christ in preaching within Calvin’s thought. This article is a great addition to what has been called the last frontier of Calvin scholarship–his preaching.

Other articles of interest include the following:

T. David Gordon’s and Charles G. Dennison’s articles on evangelism present a rather unpopular perspective, yet one which deserves more thoughtful consideration by American Presbyterians.

Carl Trueman’s critical, yet appreciative review of David Well’s writings raises some important questions relating to OPC identity, especially for those who (like me?) pride themselves (perhaps too much?) for having a so-called pilgrim identity. Wells could have done better with his response, however, since he does not actually respond to much.

I truly appreciate Pastor Reynolds insightful contributions and his undoubtedly mammoth efforts in editing this professional publication amidst normal pastoral responsibilities. One may raise the question, however, whether seven editorials, a book review, and three review articles all by one author is slightly unbalanced.

Download Previous Printed Editions of Ordained Servant: