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             As with any document that claims to be revelation from a divine source, the Qur’an concerns itself with divulging the meaning of existence within the cosmic context.  Like all holy books, its basic presuppositions find their locus in not only the actual existence of a deity but also in the desire of said deity to communicate with its creation.  Within the broader socio-religious context, the Qur’an claims to be the successor and final authority in the tradition of monotheistic religions coming out of the Middle East begun by Judaism and continued by Christianity.  The Qur’an is seen by Muslims as the miracle that ratified Muhammad’s prophetic ministry: a revelation delivered to a devout man born fatherless in the lower caste of a tribal culture.[1]  As such, the Qur’an follows the Judeo-Christian tradition in expounding the will of the transcendent God, Allah, to his creation in order to reconcile fallen humanity to himself.  This review will examine the interplay between Allah, humanity, and prayer as themes within the Qur’an.

            The Qur’an reveals Allah to humanity in a style informed by eastern traditions.  Namely, while Allah is personally concerned for humanity he is seen primarily as transcendent by Islamic traditions.  Consequently, humanity does not know Allah through personal intimacy, but rather through Allah’s self-revelation in the Qur’an and a strict adherence to the righteous lifestyle it prescribes in the Five Pillars.  While Islam has a rich theology which stems from the ninety-nine names used for Allah, four attributes in particular seem to be communicated about Allah in the Qur’an.  First, Allah is the one true God, the Creator of all that exists.  Second, Allah is the sovereign ruler of all that he created.  Third, Allah is the righteous judge of all, believing and non-believing Muslims alike.  Fourth, Allah is truly merciful and understanding to those who will confess him as the one true God and Muhammad as his prophet.

            The Qur’an proclaims that Allah “created all things and gave them due proportions” (87:2).  His power to create is a demonstration of his status as the one true God (6:102; 65:12; In verses which echo the biblical account of creation in Genesis[2], Allah created all things perfectly in six days (32:7), divided the heavens and earth (21:30), put the sun, moon and stars into orbit (21:33; 41:37), and caused the sun to give light to the day while the moon gives light to the night (10:5; 6:96).  Additionally, humanity is the pinnacle of Allah’s creation (45:13; 55:3-9; 67:2).  These claims are foundational to the Muslim understanding of Allah’s essential attributes.  The picture the Qur’an paints of who Allah is thoughtfully extends concentrically to notions that prove logically necessary.

            If Allah is the one true God, and he is the Creator of all that exists, then it logically follows that Allah is also sovereign over his creation.  Allah’s is a sovereignty that first encompasses the created order (18:26).  He has perfect control of the universe, space, time and all their workings (25:2; 35:13; 2:255).  He has also ordained the existence of living creatures (11:118), kingdoms and tribes (2:107; 3:189; 5:17-18; 9:116), and even personal affliction (6:17-18; 10:107).  Indeed, he directs all of the personal affairs of his people (9:51).  Interestingly, Allah has also directly guided the evolution of his prophets’ messages.  The revelation, mistakes and subsequent corruption of Allah’s message within the Jewish and Christian traditions were all directed by the hand of Allah (6:106-107, 148-149).  Ultimately, however, the outcome of all the created order and even those who submit to Allah are all an outcome of his volition (7:178-179; 10:99; 11:118-119; 16:93; 32:13).

            Two attributes of Allah that are set in tension against one another in the Qur’an, much like the biblical picture of God, are judgment and mercy.  The judgment of Allah is preeminently fair (95:8, 6:73).  In fact, the predominant idea surrounding Allah as judge is his ability to set everything to rights.  Islam teaches that a final judgment in which every person’s account is settled will occur.  Each, believer or unbeliever, will be accountable to Allah for their behavior (25:25-26; 40:15-17; 2:123, 254; 22:56; 3:9, 25).  The view of Allah as preeminent judge is juxtaposed with the proclamation of his mercy, sometimes within the same passage (6:12).  Often, the reach of Allah’s mercy is as ubiquitous as his sovereignty (38:66, 4:110; 39:53); and in many regards, the mercy of Allah seems far more inclusive than that expressed in the Bible (53:32; 14:7; 35:45).  Allah, then, is communicated as a divine ruler, the Creator of everything that is lavish with his mercy and fearsome to those who will not submit.  While the sin of humanity is pervasive and an affront to Allah, the Qur’an communicates a high anthropology.

            Similar to the account of creation, the Qur’an contains an account of the fall of Adam that runs parallel to the biblical account in many ways.  However, in the Qur’an Adam and Eve beg Allah’s forgiveness after their fall (7:23), and he grants them forgiveness, punishing them only with mortal life on earth (7:25).  The theological outcome of this account is a high anthropology that concedes humanity’s proclivity for sin (20:124), but rejects any kind of doctrine of “original sin,” stating instead that every person has a natural inclination toward faith and repulsion from sin (95:46; 49:7).  The Qur’an lucidly explains that humanity urges itself on to evil (12:53), that sickness dwells in their hearts (2:10), and resentful when good befalls it (70:19-21).  Nonetheless, humanity’s ultimate purpose and lifelong endeavor is the pursuit of wisdom and obedience, which the true believer pursues with joy and the unbeliever is incapable of comprehending (22:46).

            An interesting paradox occurs within the Qur’an concerning the will of humanity and Allah’s sovereignty, though.  While the Qur’an is careful to articulate the sovereign rule of Allah, its high anthropology places each person firmly in control of their obedience to or rejection of Allah.  One account of Allah’s interaction with Satan demonstrates that only humanity will be given the discretion concerning which company to keep, to choose a path of evil or righteousness (15:33-50).  Even those who pursue paths of destruction are offered respite for a time, so that they might come to the true knowledge of Allah (35:45).  In fact, the God who “governs the destiny of all things” will grant help to those who choose to pray and give (22:41-43).  Here, and in many other places, the relationship between Allah and humanity emerges.  Allah is sovereign and directs the affairs of creations, but it is the will submission of the heart which garners his favor and attention.  While all five of the Great Pillars are essential elements in demonstrating submission to Allah, prayers prove a consistent conduit of favor in the Qur’an.

            Prayer, as prescribed in the Qur’an, is a daily ritual intended to bring the person’s whole being into alignment through the remembrance of Allah (6:162; 20:14; 29:45).  It is intended that daily prayers, the Salaat, be observed throughout a person’s life (19:31; 70:23, 34).  Those prayers are to take place three times throughout the day: morning, evening, and the middle of the day (24:58; 11:114; 2:238).  There are several stipulations within the Qur’an concerning the ritual of prayer.  First, the person praying must perform ritual cleansing with water (4:43; 5:6). 

            Prayers must be said facing the Ka’ba, and must be observed on time every day (2:125, 143-150; 22:26; 4:103).  The prayer should be begun in a standing position, with noteworthy exceptions for riding or driving (2:238; 3:39; 4:102; 2:239).  The person praying physically symbolizes the submission to Allah that should be occurring in the heart by first bowing, then prostrating (4:102; 22:26; 38:24; 48:29).  Again, unusual circumstances warrant amending the physical ritual during prayer (2:239).

            Though the ritual seems to possess a large portion of the Qur’an’s teaching of prayer, there is a call to adopt a contemplative attitude as well (4:43).  It is not uncommon for the reverence expressed in prayer to be accompanied by mental recall of one of Allah’s attributes (23:2; 17:111).  This of course is intended to be a centering exercise based on the person’s condition or needs at the time of prayer.  Prayer is firmly set aside as a time to honor and reflect upon Allah (6:162; 20:14; 29:45).  Even mentioning other names during prayer times is seen as an act of rebellion against humanity’s need for God (72:18; 29:45).  Ultimately, the purpose of prayer in the Qur’an is to remember and glorify the greatness of Allah, his mercy, and humanity’s dependence upon him (1:1-7; 20:14; 17:111; 2:45).  One other unique element of prayer within the Qur’an is its frequent pairing with almsgiving.  Often, when Muslims are called to pray, they are also called to give to the poor as a demonstration of a heart that recognizes human dependence on Allah and communal responsibility for those who pray together (2:43,83,110; 4:77; 22:78; 107:1-7).  Such expressions of practicality often accompany rituals of devotion within the Qur’an.

            Consequently, it is these types of rituals, specifically that of prayer, which bridge the gap between a rebellious human population and a transcendent, holy God.  While many themes of the Qur’an have been left unexplored here, these three seem to encompass the greater intent of Muhammad’s message to Muslims.  Namely, God (Allah) does exist, and he is the sovereign creator of all that exists.  Though he transcends all of creation, he is a merciful and forgiving God to those who submit, and a fearsome and perfect judge to those who will not believe.  The crown-jewel of his creation, humanity, teeters perilously on the edge of repentance.  While all of humanity is capable of and desirous of living well, many have given way to their passions and follow a path of destruction.  However, Allah has sent Muhammad with instructions about how to live a life of submission to God.  A life that begins with confession and continues in demonstration of faith through holy living.

 


[1] Some claim that Muhammad was illiterate, and that the beauty of the Qur’an is an evidence of its divine nature.  It is a disputed point, but Muhammad was an unlikely source for the Qur’an, illiterate or not.

[2] However, in the Qur’an all living things, including humanity, were brought forth from water (21:30).

 james

michael icon

Part I

Tomorrow (September 29) is Michaelmas, or the feast day of St. Michael and All Angels.  In the whole church calendar/communion of the saints thing I have the hardest time with angels.  Maybe because there is so much non-sense concerning angels in Christian pop-culture.  There are at least some evangelicals who don’t know who St. Francis is, but whose house is littered with what can only be called icons of various guardian angels, whom they unabashedly venerate.  Not that I have a problem with the theology of angels, or other people venerating angels per se, just that the practice doesn’t appeal to me.  Give me your St. Laurences, your St. Francis’, and your St. Cyprians.  These are people who mean something to me, who inspire me to be a better follower of Jesus.  St. Michael and St. Uruel, not so much. 

But as a purely cultural event, Michaelmas is fascinating as customs and legends are perpetuated tomorrow which date back at least to the Middle Ages.  Eating the stubble goose, baking St. Michael’s Bannock, call me a nerd all you want, but I get into that sort of thing.  And the church calendar is chalk full of opportunities to participate in deep-rooted cultural practices. 

 If you let them, these practices serve to re-enforce Christian discipline, and your committment to serve Christ. The St. Francis Day Blessing of the Beasts, All-Saints Day, Kingdom-tide, Advent, all serve as reminders of our shared history of redemption, and our shared commitment to follow in the footsteps of the saints, as well as reminders of particular practices and doctrines especially exemplified by certain saints (St. Francis’ care and appreciation for all Creation, St. Laurence’s care for the poor, St. Cyprian’s exemplification of Jesus’ command to love one’s enemies, etc.).   The Church calendar with all its feasts and traditions is nothing more than a guide to medieval Incarnational living, making your faith an integral part of your everyday life, though simple things: meals, shared gifts, dances, carnivals, etc.  What’s not to love about that?

 

san ysidro santo

Part II

And, while we’re on the subject of saints, why can’t I ask them to pray for me?  I can call up my friend and ask him to pray for me, can’t I?  Well, Christ’s redemptive work transcends time, uniting me with all my Christian sisters and brothers everywhere from every time, why can’t I ask some of them to pray for me as well?  The answer: I can, and do. 

As I go to the garden today, San Ysidro, pray for me, that my work is fruitful and glorifying to God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, Amen. 

The Origins of Postliberalism

September 26, 2009

So I’m putzing about on the interwebs this morning (not doing my homework as I specifcally woke up early on a Saturday to do!) and happened upon this article. It discusses the relatively modern development of “Postliberal Theology”—a stream that has influenced much of the thought on this blog.

I believe it’s a fair introduction that highlights the notable strengths and challenges of the Postliberal position. I present this here for our reference and to help those commenters who might find some our Christian ideas unusual at times.

I can’t even say I’ve read all the scholars mentioned in this article particularly extensively—but I simply can’t deny my affinity for some of their ideas. Thus, please don’t think I’m setting up this movement as some sort of standard or label for me or anyone else who writes on theophiliacs. This is just one more voice in the ongoing RSS feed of our lives (blegh! what a disgustingly cheesy metaphor).

Roots of the Church of England in the Nineteenth Century
Reed SignatureMy life recently has involved little more than slinging coffee, deciphering strange characters on chalkboards and studying awkwardly large books with pretentious titles. Not wanting to neglect the blog, however, I present here an abridged version of a short essay I wrote for my Anglican Studies course last summer. I admit it’s not the most compelling read—either as an essay or a blog post—but I figure warmed up leftovers are preferable to skipping dinner any day.One of the great privileges enjoyed by eighteenth century Anglican churchmen was the confidence that came from defining their Church negatively. The popular eighteenth century periodical, The Spectator, describes a faith between “bigotry” and “atheism.” The Church of England was neither Methodist nor Deist, “…charting a path between…the contrary evils of ‘lukewarmness’ and ‘enthusiasm.’”

This attitude of moderation was challenged at the dawn of the nineteenth century as calls for stricter self-definition came from across the Anglican spectrum. The Latitudinarian, Evangelical and Oxford movements arose individually in response to perceived needs for reform in the Church of England. However, by the end of the century, these streams became increasingly more defined by their clashes with eachother rather than by the issues that had sparked their creation.

In one sense, Latitudinarian roots can be traced as early as the Elizabethan Age to the Queen’s insistence on tolerance of the various Anglican flavors in her kingdom. The most direct lineage, however, comes from the “Cambridge Platonists” who distanced themselves from Laud’s strict ecclesiastical policies and criticized popular Calvinist doctrines like election. The Latitudinarians found what they saw as an ally in Hooker who promoted Reason as a gift from God as well as in John Locke who’s notion of a reasonable Christianity appealed to young clerics tired of ideological strife in the church. Eighteenth Century Latitudinarianism also introduced unorthodox views into the English Christian landscape.[1]

Latitudinarians in the Nineteenth Century were often strict Erastians. The Oxford Noetics advocated Christianizing England by uniting all Christians (except Quakers and Roman Catholics) into a single, national Church. The Tractarians would later react to a perceived threat from the early century Whig government acting on these Erastian ideas.

Latitudinarians also made waves in the realms of biblical criticism, notably with the publication pf “Essays and Reviews” in 1860. Pioneers like Benjamin Jowett aimed to “think freely within the limits of the Church of England,” yet their embrace of German school textual methods led to two of the seven authors being condemned as heretics. However, it was less than thirty years later, that a group of “orthodox” High-Church Anglicans published “Lux Mundi,” a similarly critical volume that challenged conventional, inerrant hermeneutics. Outrage followed, but the authors were not condemned. Latitudinarians had achieved a place for critical scholarship in the Church of England.

The Reformation’s emphases on Sola Scriptura and Justification by Faith would collide with the Wesleyan revivals’ emphases on personal piety and conversion experience to form the nineteenth century Anglican Evangelical. Scholars have long drawn up Victorian Evangelicals into two parties divided up roughly chronologically; the earlier Clapham Moderates and later Recordite Extremists. The older, moderates were defined primarily by their philanthropy and Victorian sensibilities.

Many Early Evangelicals acted out of a sense of spiritual responsibility, given the absence or spiritual deterioration of local clergy. The Clapham Sect (an upper class, Evangelical society led by MP William Wilberforce) popularly remembered for helping end the slave trade were also involved in improving work conditions in the booming industrial society, challenging the living conditions in prisons, fighting animal cruelty and reforming public education. The Clapham Sect advocated evangelism overseas, strict Sabbath observance, and family centered spirituality.[2] The later, more Extreme Evangelicals (named Recordites by modern scholars after the chief periodical, The Record) were defined more by their opposition to mid century Ritualism, and their strict defense of the verbal inspiration of Scripture.

For twelve years the Tractarians dominated the Church of England’s theological, political and ecclesial landscape. High-churchmanship had slowly gained popularity in the years following the French and American Revolutions as many in England found the authority structure a relief. John Keble’s Assize sermon sparked the Oxford Movement in 1833 calling for a return to Church sovereignty. Broadly defined, the Tractarians pushed for a return to a definition of the Apostolic Church as above state, a more sacramental theology and a restoration of ritualistic worship.

John Henry Newman

John Henry Newman

Heavily influenced by the Romantic Movement,[3] the Tractarians were infatuated with the middle ages. Consequently, disputes erupted over baptismal regeneration, the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist and the Church of England’s relationship to Rome. When Newman published his Tract XC outlining a Roman Catholic understanding of the Articles of Religion, it unleashed a barrage of criticism on the increasingly suspected movement. The reaction drove many leading Tractarians to convert to Rome, thus supposedly confirming the suspicions of many of their critics.

Also of increasing concern was the restoration of ritualism to England’s churches. Tractarians were critical of much of the protestant tradition, devoid of pomp and ceremony, claiming it was unapproachable by the uneducated. Extremist Evangelicals on the other hand were particularly critical of the popery subtly slipping into their Church. In the later half of the nineteenth century, some Anglo-Catholics were even imprisoned for taking confession and other “Romish” practices.

This tumultuous century marked a change of course for the Church of England. The extremes largely rejected in the eighteenth century fought to claim ground in a rapidly modernizing nation in the nineteenth.


[1] These included anti-trinitarianism, deism and Arianism. “The desire for a liturgy broad enough to accommodate these views led to attacks on the Athanasian and Nicene Creeds.” Perry Butler, “From the Early Eighteenth Century to the Present Day,” in The Study of Anglicanism, ed. John Booty, Jonathan Knight and Stephen Sykes (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2004), 38

[2] The Wilberforces’ chief method for the accomplishment of these aims was the formation of societies, i.e. the Church Missionary Society and the Society for the Suppression of Vice. “Wilberforce felt that God had given him two great callings: the abolition of the salve trade and the reformation of manners.” Nigel Scotland “Evangelical Anglicans in a Revolutionary Age,” (Waynesboro: Paternoster Press 2004) 37

[3] An example of Romanticism, John Newman on the Eucharist:

“A thick black veil is spread between this world and the next. We mortal men range up and down it, to and fro, and see nothing. There is no access through it into the next world. In the Gospil this veil is not removed; it remains, but every now and then marvelous disclosures are made to us of what is behind it. At times we seem to catch a glimpse of a form which we shall hereafter see face to face. We approach, and in spite of the darkness, our hands, or our head, or our brow, or our lips become, as it were, sensible of the contact of something more than earthly. We know not where we are, but we have been bathing in water, and a voice tells us that it is blood.”

John Henry Newman “Worship, a Preparation for Christ’s Coming (1838) qtd. in George Herring, What Was The Oxford Movement?” (New York: Continuum 2002) 103

james

I’ve always loved bumper stickers, especially ones that are sarcastic, satirical and of a political or religious nature. Some of my favorites:

join the armyfocus on your own damn familywho would jesus torture

And my all time favorite, though I could not find an image:

WHERE ARE YOU NOW, JOHN WAYNE? AMERICA NEEDS YOU.

Up until recently I had a bumper sticker on my car that had words such as WAR, POVERTY, ABORTION, EUTHANASIA, CAPITAL PUNISHMENT all with red lines drawn through them.  The point of the bumper sticker was that one should be consistently pro-life, and not just anti-abortion.  Several weeks ago I was driving home and as I got into the turning lane to turn onto my street I noticed a red Subaru station wagon swerving across several lanes of traffic in order to pull up behind me.  He tailgated me to my house, then drove away slowly, giving me an angry look.  As he drove off I noticed that his Subaru (as all Subarus are) was covered in liberal bumper stickers, several of which seemed to have a generally atheist message. A block away he turned around and came back just in time to catch me walking to my front door.  He rolled down his window and yelled, “My father is dying in the hospital right now, and your bumper sticker makes me feel like shit.”  He was obviously crying as he drove off at high speed, running the stop sign near my house.  I didn’t even have a chance to finish dropping my jaw before he was completely gone. 

I’ve been thinking a lot about that encounter.  I can only guess why my bumper sticker offended him, but the most reasonable thing to believe is that he was faced with the decision of euthanizing his terminally ill father.   To anyone in that sort of situation I’m sure that my bumper sticker seemed coldly black and white (in actuality it is black and white only with those aforementioned red lines).  I realized that I had inadvertently fed that man’s personal narrative concerning Christians.  He officially believes me to be an uncaring, judgmental bastard.  What’s more, and of course this is all speculation, he might even categorize me as of the same ilk of those who shoot abortion doctors and blow up pharmacies for selling the morning after pill.  He gave me no chance to explain, or to ask questions, or to listen to his story, so why should he think otherwise? 

I also realized that he too was feeding my personal narrative: Here was an atheist sinner (since he was driving a Subaru he clearly condoned lesbianism to boot), about to commit murder, and was rudely confronting me on my doorstep because MY bumper sticker filled his heart with the conviction of the Holy Spirit. 

Then my heart was filled with the conviction of the Holy Spirit.  This was a man in pain, facing the enormous questions, responsibilities and emotions surrounding life and death, and I was using him to justify my own beliefs and opinions as they are inadequately expressed on a poorly applied 3×8 vinyl sticker.  I finally took to heart something that I’d heard a million times and is, frankly, so elementary that I’m a little embarrassed about it: Bumper stickers serve no function besides patting the back of those fellow drivers who agree with you, and pissing off those  fellow drivers who disagree with you.   Either way it serves a selfish purpose, and one that many times dehumanizes some very important issues.

That man’s story, and the overarching issues of what it means to be pro-life are both extremely complex.  The fact is, you simply can’t boil down all the complexities, the emotions, the politics, the morality and ethics of the pro-life debate into a bumper sticker; because for all of the polemics and sterile moralizing that goes on on either side of the pro-life debate (and other battlefields of the “culture wars”), at the end of the day we’re dealing with human beings, and in the process of defending our beliefs we sinfully ignore the humanity of others (which is ironic in my case since I am pro-life and talk about the sanctity of life and all that). 

Advertising moral claims on your car to people that you have a slim chance of developing a relationship with, of explaining yourself to, and especially of genuinely listening to their side of things is counter-productive at best.  We must acknowledge the image of Christ in our opponents and allies alike, and that’s really hard to do when the entire debate is fought with bumper stickers.      

So, I covered up my politically charged bumper sticker with another one.  It says:

 I’VE KILLED PEOPLE FOR LESS, MOTHERF#$@&*, SO BACK OFF!

 

 

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Portrait_of_Martin_Luther_as_an_Augustinian_Monk

Luther and Predestinarianism in the Reformation

            The similarities between Augustine and Luther extend beyond Luther’s experience as a monk of the Augustinian order, which seems a forgone conclusion at first.  Clearly, Augustine heavily influences Luther regarding presuppositions that underpin their predestinarianism.  Bayer contends that Luther’s interpretation of Scripture leads him to the same conclusions about human nature as Augustine: the nature of sin in man is both, “superbia and desperatio.”[1]  However, Luther has more in common with Augustine than just a hermeneutical predisposition.  Augustine affected Luther’s thinking so significantly because of a shared soteriological need.  Luther offered more than intellectual obeisance to Augustine; he needed Augustine to lead him down a philosophical path that would clear his conscience.

            Luther’s life was plagued with the same kind of religious upheaval that Augustine experienced.  An important difference, though, is that Luther seemed to be cognizant of an internal upheaval that drove his various religious experiences.  Augustine sought explanation for his seeming reluctance to seek Christ wholeheartedly, but Luther was so consumed by a pursuit of piety that he could not easily find solace.  Luther’s early life lacked the wholehearted embrace of sinfulness that plagued Augustine, but his angst over the origin, nature, and effect of sin were strikingly similar.  As a monk, Luther sought consolation in works of grace hoping for absolution and justification.  However, even a strict regimen of sacramental observance and contrition left him with the dread of damnation.  Luther became so obsessed with absolution that he pathologically pondered his sin and found that confession only intensified his guilt.  After a foray into mysticism, Luther abandoned his strict sacramental pursuit for an endeavor in loving God.  Sadly, his childhood experience with severe authority figures left him hating God instead.[2]

            At the behest of his confessor, Luther entered into a lectureship at the University of Wittenberg.  His superior hoped, as in the case of Jerome, that Luther would find his temptations and guilt abated in the study of Scripture.  This appointment now seems providential.  While preparing a lecture in the Epistle to the Romans, Luther concluded that both faith and justification are the work of God, alone.[3]  This revelation about the nature of grace and its correspondence to both faith and justification were the balm that Luther required.  Augustine’s work on predestination in relationship to Romans provided the fine-tuning that Luther needed.  This predestinarianism, then, became for Luther what it had been for Augustine, a means of confidently receiving grace.  Luther was lead to affirm predestination both because, “it was a corollary of justification by faith as a free gift of God, and because he found it amply supported by the authority of Paul and Augustine.”[4]  However, this doctrine also provided a point of attack for the increasingly Pelagian Catholic Church.

            Just as Augustine found cause to sharpen his predestinarianism in Pelagius, Luther found cause to refine his position because of Desiderius Erasmus.  Luther and Erasmus, who had averted being involved in the conflict with reformers to this point, engaged in a published dispute over the ability of humanity to cooperate with God in achieving salvation.  Erasmus’ view that the human will is capable of fighting “against the flesh or for the Spirit,”[5] was rejected wholly by Luther.  He countered with arguments, which reasoned, “Man can contribute nothing toward his own salvation good enough to be juxtaposed with any work of God.”[6]  Interestingly, Luther sided with the most revered scholars of the Catholic Church, Augustine and Aquinas among them, against Erasmus and the church.  Luther’s defense of Augustinian predestinarianism would not be emulated by the rest of the Protestant church, though.  The other Reformers took the example of Luther and the work of Augustine a step further.

The Reformation’s Departure from Augustinian and Lutheran Predestinarianism

            The various incarnations of Augustine and Luther’s soteriological doctrine eventually yielded to a theological system that expunged human cooperation in faith and broadened the doctrine’s scope to the entirety of God’s providential rule over creation.  Certainly, many agreed with Luther and sought to expand his influence and teaching.  Many hoped, though, to expound upon or deviate from the teaching of Luther.  In fact, Luther found his ideals and doctrine caught between the Catholic Church and the likes of Carlstadt and Calvin.[7] 

            Nevertheless, the remaining important issue revolves around Luther’s resolve in pursuing Augustinian predestinarianism, though not likely out of any inordinate dedication to Augustine himself.  Nonetheless, McGrath observes that, “Of the reformers, it is Martin Luther who is closest to Augustine in his teaching on justification.”[8]  He remains the closest to Augustine because he did not attempt to derive a theological system out of his notions of predestination.  While Luther spoke plainly of ecclesiastical and priestly behavior he found contradictory to Scripture, he did seek to know the word of God truly, even if it meant agreeing with the church.  Melanchthon viewed Luther within the Reformation context as a voice “interchangeable” with Augustine: a voice that was renewing the early teachings of the church.[9]  In fact, according to McGrath, “Augustine’s conflict with Pelagianism in particular is seen by Melanchthon as an exemplar of the Lutheran protest against the Pelagianism of the sixteenth-century church.”[10]

            Wallace provides helpful categorization of the change that occurs after Luther in the Reformation:

     “A more significant division between doctrines of predestination is not whether it is single or double, but between those versions where its soteriological impact remains central and those where the doctrine becomes an organizing principle for a theological system and is thus intertwined with the whole consideration of providence, something which became increasingly the case in the later part of the sixteenth century.”[11]

This kind of predestinarianism seems present in Augustine and Luther.  However, historians and theologians alike have long commented on the polarizing, often inflammatory, nature of both Augustine’s and Luther’s polemical treatises.  Wallace notes that while there is a strong predestinarianism in Luther’s reply to Erasmus in the Bondage of the Will, a marked emphasis on double predestination does not occur in the English Reformation until it is formulated by the Swiss and Rhineland Reformed traditions.[12]  These reformed traditions inherited their emphasis on double predestination from the likes of John Calvin.

            It would be a mischaracterization to promulgate a claim that Calvin merely expanded the scope of Augustine’s theories.  McGrath notes that Calvin, in his Institutes, does not wholly approve of Augustine’s treatment and departs from Augustine’s belief that “Christ is the source of man’s righteousness, in that the Spirit is poured into man’s heart on account of his obedience.”[13]  Calvin insists that the transformative work of faith and grace are completely alien to the human nature.  God is sovereign over all of creation and its redemption, and humanity is utterly depraved.  Calvin’s departure from Augustine and Luther occurs most notably in the creation of a theological system that locates double predestination as one of its pillars of thought. 

            This shift in theology has been rejected by church councils for over a thousand years.  It demands that all of Scripture bow to its methodology.  Geisler points out that the consequences of this system burden humanity with a God that is the direct author of evil and that hates the non-elect.[14]  As one who worked tirelessly and meticulously to avoid those very consequences in his own theology, this outcome would have been completely unacceptable to Augustine

            However, it also suffers from crippling philosophical contradictions, and it should suffice to note that Augustine’s predestinarianism has been relegated to an element of theology until the emergence of lapsarianism.  This system of decrees and there seeming authority, even over the biblical text, create a web of presuppositions that rest squarely on Augustine’s philosophy of the origin of evil.  Robert Brown identifies the philosophical problems associated with using Augustine’s predestinarianism as a foundational system of thought, explaining that Augustine’s explanation of first sin is at best incomprehensible.[15]  If it becomes something more than incomprehensible, then the system’s other claims regarding God’s nature or his culpability in creating evil is suspect at best.  Geisler has already hinted at this in his theological critique of double predestination, but this is clearly his point of reference for making the claim.

Conclusion

            While predestination is an unavoidably biblical concept, Augustine and Luther intended to direct the hearts of men toward God in gratitude for grace received, not to establish a lens through which all other Scripture must pass.  Predestination achieved, for Augustine and Luther, a different end than what is achieved by a system based on double predestination.  Augustinian and Lutheran predestinarianism provides a soteriological framework to understand how humanity, in its plight, is able to receive and be confident in justification.  This predestination declares the God is the author and finisher of our faith, and that there is no person or thing that can separate us from that work.

 


[1] Oswald Bayer, “Freedom?  The Anthropological in Luther and Melanchthon Compared.” The Harvard Theological Review, 91 (October 1998): 375.

[2] González, The Story of Christianity, Vol. 2, 16-17.

[3] Ibid., 19-20.

[4] Ibid., 42.

[5] Oswald Bayer, “Freedom,” 377.

[6] Roland N. Bainton, Christianity, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000): 253.

[7] Though for very different reasons.  Ibid.

[8] Alister E. McGrath, “Forerunners of the Reformation? A Critical Examination of the Evidence for Precursors of the Reformation Doctrines of Justification.” The Harvard Theological Review, 75 (April 1982): 230.

[9] Peter Fraenkel, Testimonia Patrum: The Function of the Patristic Argument in the Theology of Philip Melanchthon, (Geneva: Droz, 1961) 32.

[10] Alister E. McGrath, “Forerunners of the Reformation,” 229.

[11] Wallace, Dewey D. “The Doctrine of Predestination in the Early English Reformation.” Church History, 43 (June 1974): 203-204.

[12] Ibid., 202.

[13] Alister E. McGrath, “Forerunners of the Reformation,” 233.

[14] Geisler, Systematic Theology, 567.

[15] A term Brown utilizes as an expression of a temporal happenstance with a transcendent cause.  The sin of Satan and Adam may have happened temporally, but its cause is outside of our closed finite system.  Brown argues that any other explanation of Augustine’s postulations results in grievous philosophical error.  I contend that Brown is reading Augustine through the lens of Calvin and a theological system.  If Augustine can be read concerning the origin and effect of a sinful will in relation to humanity’s ability to save itself, then Augustine has accomplished what Brown had hoped he would, a structure for interpreting one’s present existence (324).  See Robert F. Brown, “The First Evil Will Must Be Incomprehensible: A Critique of Augustine.” Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 46 (September 1978): 315-329.

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Shahada

“There is no god but He: That is the witness of God, His angels, and those endowed with knowledge, standing firm in justice.  There is no god but He – The Exalted in Power, the Wise.”

                                                                                    (Qur’an 3:18)

            The recitation of a creed has proven throughout history to be the preeminent and indispensible element of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.  In Judaism, the Shema found in Deuteronomy 6:4 remains the most important confession and prayer.  In Christianity, the Nicene Creed, and the Apostle’s Creed as predecessor, establishes the rule of orthodoxy and the test of faith.  The correlations between these three monotheistic religions and their normative creedal expressions are undeniable.  Undoubtedly, “Hear O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one,” and “We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things visible and invisible” are both on par with the Islamic proclamation that, “there is no god but Allah.”[1]  Consequently, the first of the five pillars of Islam institutes orthodoxy with simplicity, establishes a liturgy of substantial historical/cultural weight, and initiates the faithful into a lifestyle of service to Allah.

             Fry and King (“Islamic Religious Practices: the Pillars of Faith” in Swartley) observe that the Shahada succeeds in refuting a slew of heresies that afflicted the Christian church with a single statement, [2] “There is no god but Allah.”  In a sense, the rigid monotheism of Islam in comparison to the Trinitarian doctrines of Christianity provides a firmer foundation for concise defense.  For the Muslim, there is no greater sin than violating the Tawhid or “oneness” of God; it is, in fact, unforgiveable.  This theological foundation serves to remind Muslims that their association to Allah through the Muslim faith constitutes something so substantial that it is impossible to comprehend it.[3]  As such, there is no need for the often complicated theological deliberation that arises in the Christian creeds in order to defend Trinitarian doctrine. 

             The Shahada continues, “And Muhammad is the Prophet of God.”  Where Christians may have agreed with the previous statement of God’s unity and singularity, they must certainly depart with the implications of the remainder.  Islam does not teach that Muhammad is divine, or that he should be worshiped.  Indeed, such a thing would be a violation of the Tawhid.  However, they see Muhammad as the final and greatest prophet of God.  Therefore, in Islam a confession of Allah must also necessarily point humanity to the only place where full knowledge of God can be obtained, the uncorrupted revelation given to the prophet Mohammad in the Qur’an.  Kung summarizes, “It is of the greatest conceivable simplicity and in fact can be rendered with two words.  The first word is Allah… the second word is Muhammad.”[4]

             Cornell explains that the Shahada maintains such a centralized role within Muslim theology that it even dictates the liturgy.  Each of the five canonical prayers and the call to prayer itself include a recitation of the Shahada.[5]  The Great Confession is ideally the first thing a Muslim hears at birth and the last thing a Muslim hears before s/he dies; it precedes Muslims into battle, and in peace it is proclaimed throughout the city.[6]  As such, the Shahada shapes the religious expression and experience of the Muslim.  Surely, the other pillars demonstrate that Islam demands submission, but the confession remains the primary component of the “mental make-up” of all Muslims.[7]

             Finally, the Shahada constitutes the energizing sentiment behind the Islamic lifestyle.  Braswell points out that the confession identifies not only a theological locus in the belief in God, but also accountability to God through action.[8]  Turner explains that, “Even the most cursory glance at the Koran and its stance on the question of belief and submission should be enough to convince the reader that Islam is something to be obtained through conviction.”[9]  The Shahada represents both an intellectual, emotional, and spiritual submission to God and an adherence to the piety and righteous walk demonstrated by the prophet Mohammad.  Consequently, the Shahada is in a sense the lense through which Islamic theology and devotion are filtered.

 


[1] See Swartley 88-89, Cornell 9-10, Kung 238-239,

[2] Keith E. Swartley, ed. Encountering the World of Islam, (Atlanta: Authentic Media, 2005), 89.

[3] Vincent J. Cornell, ed. Voices of Islam, Vol. 1 Voices of Tradition, (Westport: Praeger Publishers, 2007), 9.

[4] Hans Küng, Tracing the Way: Spiritual Dimensions of the World Religions, (London: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2002), 239.

[5] Cornell, Voices of Islam, 10.

[6] Swartley, Encountering the World of Islam, 90.

[7] Colin Turner, Islam: the Basics, (New York: Routledge, 2006), 101.

[8] George W. Braswell, Jr. Islam: Its Prophet, Peoples, Politics, and Power, (Nashville: Broadman and Holman Publishers, 1996), 60.

[9] Turner, Islam: the Basics, 101.

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