Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Olson's Arminian Myths #8-10

This week I will conclude our summary and discussion of Roger Olson's book Arminian Theology: Myths and Realities with myths #8-10.

Myth 8: Arminians Do Not Believe in Predestination.

Reality: Predestination is a biblical concept; classical Arminians interpret it differently than Calvinists without denying it. It is God’s sovereign decree to elect believers in Jesus Christ and includes God’s foreknowledge of those believers’ faith.

Comment: I loved this chapter because this is such a common myth. The debate between Calvinists and Arminians is too often framed as between predistination and free will. The fact of the matter is that both Calvinists and Arminians believe in both predestination and free will. The question is how to define and relate the two concepts. The Arminian position on predestination is characterized by assigning priority to God's foreknowledge. "Those he foreknew he also predestined." Olson dedicated the second half of the chapter to differentiating Classical Arminianism from Molinist "middle knowledge" and open theism. Although I am not committed to either Molinism or open theism, I do think it unfortunate that Olson has determined to cut such a narrow path for Arminians. Many Open Theist I talk to consider themselves "consistent Arminians" or at least "revisionist Arminians." Maybe they are wrong about that (and I think Olson makes a good case that the Arminian position requires an affirmation of foreknowledge), but the author's political intention to distance Arminianism from controversial territory even within the Evangelical camp is glaring.

Myth 9: Arminian Theology Denies Justification by Grace Alone Through Faith Alone.

Reality: Classical Arminian theology is a Reformation theology; it embraces divine imputation of righteousness by God’s grace through faith alone and preserves the distinction between justification and sanctification.

Comment: This chapter is especially helpful as a corrective to the claim that Arminian theologies are by definition a Catholic compromise. This comes from Calvinists in the form of an accusation (which is Olson's obvious concern), but it is oft repeated by Arminians as a strength. Although it is true that Wesley has a "Catholic spirit" and many Arminians are more comfortable drawing on the Catholic spiritual tradition than their Reformed counterpoints, Arminians are at bottom Protestants. Even if Arminians come to conclusions that make rapprochement with Roman Catholics more likely, the questions they are asking reflect typically Protestant concerns. Hopefully this chapter will remind Arminians to speak in a more nuanced way about their relationship with Roman Catholicism. Beware of easy ecumenism; reconciliation requires work!

Myth 10: All Arminians Believe in the Governmental Theory of the Atonement.

Reality: There is no one Arminian doctrine of Christ’s atonement; many Arminians accept the penal substitution theory enthusiastically while others prefer the governmental theory.

Comment: As a Wesleyan-Arminians who uses substitionary categories to understand the atonement, I found this chapter especially reassuring. I had worried that my move away from governmental to more substitionary (including but not limited to penal imagery) thinking put me at risk of abandoning my heritage. Olson collects sufficient evidence to the contrary. He does not outright reject the governmental theory, but his "enthusiastic acceptance" of penal substitutionition shows. Nevertheless, this is one of the strongest chapters simply because it (unlike some of the others) acknowledges and even explores the diversity within the Arminian tradition.

MISSING! - Myth 11: Arminian Theology Undermines the Assurance of the Believer

Reality: Not all Arminians deny the eternal security of the believer, and even those who do still teach a Biblical doctrine of assurance based on the internal testimony of the Spirit.

Comment: I am adding this myth because I find it almost ridiculous that a book on Arminian theology written in the American Evangelical context would not address the matter of eternal security. Olson is certainly right to turn his attention to other more foundation matters (eteranl security may be a major point of contention at the popular level, it is not the crux of the matter between Arminians and Calvinists). But it should not be ignored wholesale! In an earlier book co-written with Stanley Grenz, Olson posits a spectrum of theologies with folk theology on one extreme as that which should be avoided. Maybe Olson has identified the argument over eternal security as matter for "folk theologians" and can thus be safely set aside. Perhaps the publishers wanted an even 10 myths, and this one simply had to go. Whatever the reason, it's absence is disappointment.

Conclusion: Rules of Engagement for Evangelical Calvinists and Arminians.

(1) Understanding precedes evaluation.
(2) Avoid straw man arguments.
(3) Admit our own paradoxes and mysteries.
(4) Avoid attribution of beliefs not actually held by opponent; instead, identify perceived logical consequences.


Comment: Olson's conclusion contains the "payoff" of the book. He pleads with evangelicals to approach their polemics with proper charity. Following these four rules is a good place to start in treating each other with intellectual (and Christian) respect. Whatever one thinks of Arminian theology and/or Olson's version of it, any reader should heartily accept these rules of engagement. Olson has followed them in his description of Calvinists; I have tried to follow them in my description of Olson; I trust that we will follow them in the comment board and beyond.

Any thoughts?
Have you encountered these last three myths?
Are Olson's theses describing the Arminian position accurate? Are they compelling?
Why do you think Olson neglected to discuss eternal security?
What rules of engagementgment for dialogue would you add?

9 comments:

Richard H said...

I've done the most work on the doctrine of assurance, so I'll comment on that. As a United Methodist pastor I pastor churches in which theology has, for generations, usually been whittled down to something like "God loves you," "Be nice," "Don't judge." With this "foundation," my folks have no means to deal with the baptists (usually the biggest herd here in E. Texas) have to say about "once saved always saved," and how THEY believe it and Methodists don't.

When I teach on the subject I observe that from a phenomenalistic point of view, we all have the experience of people who at one time in their lives appear to be self-avowed, practicing Christians, clearly people of faith, who later in life would claim no such thing. Baptists (who are at least 3 point Calvinists around here) would say that person was never really saved but was just "fooling himself," or "playing games with God." The Methodist - if he or she said anything - would stereotypically describe the person as "falling from grace," or "backsliding." Same phenomenon, two explanations.

A quick glance at the bible doesn't help much here - both sets of ideas can be found fairly easily.

In this context, however, the common baptist approach to "eternal security" seems to undermine "assurance." Eternal security is something I can have - in theory - but I cannot have assurance that I have it, because it is always possible that I am "fooling myself" or "playing games with God."

Wesleyan theology (moving beyond the bare folk theology of many contemporary Methodists) puts its pivit foot on assurance rather than "eternal security." Through the work and witness of the Spirit, the believer can have assurance of salvation. Can this assuance ever be clouded? Yes, plainly. Can one lose the acceptance of God? I think the Wesleyan tradition (at its best) is fuzzy here.

How can it possibly be good to be fuzzy on such an important subject? My take is that such fuzziness is a proper stance to take in light of the biblical teaching and its contrast with the modern expectation of certainty. Descartes and his successors (he has many children in theology) tell us he need certainty - even absolute certainty. From what I see of the way this modern epistemological yearning has worked itself out, it has been reduced to absurdity. Sure you can have certainty - if you go no further than solipsism.

So - to sum up all this verbiage, I see a bi-polar doctrine of Assurance/Security, with one tradition putting its foot down on one pole, and the other tradition on the other pole.

Lawrence W. Wilson said...

I've encountered your myth 11 frequently and number 9 occasionally, mostly from seminarians and Baptists.

In my experience, most laypeople, whether Reformed or Arminian, are less dogmatic and quite willing to accept the valid points of the "opposing" system.

My wife, bless her heart, is not only Reformed but Dutch Reformed--and actually Dutch.

She's more Wesleyan than I am.

Anonymous said...

Dear John,

This is Brandon Warmke from Trinity Wesleyan days. If that doesn't ring a bell...well, that's alright.

At any rate, I keep a blog as well, and a Calvinist guest stopped by today and did a drive-by "demolition" of Wesleyan theology, in which he refers to something your father wrote a few years back. This prompted me to do a little interweb trolling. And here you are. I am glad you are well, buddy!

Best,
Brandon Warmke
xanga.com/bdwarmke

David Drury said...

You got my e-mail on this. Sorry it wouldn't post here earlier in the week.

I love this series... great review.

FYI - Scott Mcnight is doing a series on the same book right now at his blog (he's behind you though, only through myth 3)

http://www.jesuscreed.org/?cat=7

there's the link.

dd

Keith Drury said...

Dave,
I've seen that. The two approaches are "in the air" it seems. Even a novice minister will "practice theology" based on assumptions and propositions they may be totally unaware of.

Anonymous said...

Some good points here on both the Calvinist and Arminian understadins of theology. I think that somehow

JKnott said...

John,

This is your old classmate Jason Knott. I'm just wondering what you might think of a proposal I make on my blog (gordianknott.blogspot.com) for how to make eccumenical progress on issues of election and eschatology (where I locate the Arminian/Calvinist issue as well as Universalism/whatever). I also wrote a term paper making the same points in a more comprehensive form.

The post in question is titled "Taking Barth's Dialectic Further."

Peace,
Jason

JKnott said...

Woops! The post is "Three Views of Election: Taking Barth's Dialectic Further"

Anonymous said...

With regard to the myth of "unconditional" eternal security...
I was raised in a Southern Baptist Church and my father is an ordained SBC minister, but I have never been able to reconcile the "Once Saved, Always Saved" doctrine with the whole of scripture.
Just from a logical standpoint, how can you "fall away" from something if you were never "attached" to it in the first place? This renders Paul's warnings to the early Christians about "apostasy" utterly meaningless.
Regards,
Bryan
More of my thoughts at:
www.webspawner.com/users/eternalosas/index.html ("Once Saved, Always Saved? Sign Me Up!")
("Once Saved, Always Saved? Sign Me Up!")