John Calvin's view of
Limited Atonement
Does Calvin believe in limited Atonement or not? Many say that Calvin
did not believe it. Dr. Nicole proves them quite wrong, but not without
careful efforts.
John
Calvin’s View of the Extent of the Atonement
by Dr. Roger Nicole
This
topic has received considerable attention in the recent past, perhaps in
view of R. T. Kendall’s very controversial book Calvin and English
Calvinism to 1649.1 An effort is made here to summarize
the debate and to provide a brief evaluation.
It
is often stated—and with considerable propriety—that Calvin did not
write an explicit treatment concerning the extent of the atonement, in
fact did not deal with this precise issue in the terms to which Reformed
theology has been accustomed. It must be owned, of course, that the
question had received some attention before Calvin. Notably Gottschalk
in the ninth century had given express support to definite atonement2
and the scholastics had discussed the topic and advanced a partial
resolution in asserting that Christ’s death was “sufficient for all
men and efficient for the elect.”3 Calvin alludes to and
endorses this distinction but views it as insufficient for a proper
analysis of 1 John 2:2.4 Nevertheless a full discussion of
the scope of the atonement is not found in Calvin’s writings, and the
assessment of his position in this area has been varied.
Certain
other Reformed theologians, contemporaries of Calvin or flourishing in
the late sixteenth or the beginning of the seventeenth century,
expressed a clear endorsement of definite atonement: e.g. Peter Martyr,
H. Zanchius, T. Beza, J. Piscator, W. Ames, R. Abbot.5 As far
as we know, they did not assert that they were conscious of differing
with Calvin on this score, nor did Calvin take issue in writing with any
of those who formulated the view during his life-time.
One
of the earliest writers to claim that Calvin espoused universal
atonement was Moyse Amyraut (1596–1664) who in his Eschantillon de
la doctrine de Calvin touchant la predestination6 quoted
certain passages from Calvin’s commentaries in support of his own
position on universal atonement. Amyraut’s friend and supporter Jean
Daillé (1594–1670) later published some 43 pages of excerpts from
Calvin’s works which he deemed in line with universal grace.7
A number of these excerpts relate to the design of the atonement, but it
is really amazing to observe how most of these quotations are lacking in
cogency with respect to the precise status questionis. Some,
indeed, appear actually counterproductive, especially if replaced in
their original context.8 Amyraut’s opponents, notably
Pierre DuMoulin (1568–1658),9 André Rivet (1573–1651),10
and Frederic Spanheim (1600–1649)11 did not fail to respond
with explanations of Calvin’s texts which showed them to be compatible
with particularism. Furthermore they quoted other texts of Calvin,
especially from his Traité de la predestination,12 in
which the design of the atonement and God’s elective purpose are seen
as inextricably related.
In
July 1861, Principal William Cunningham published in the British and
Foreign Evangelical Review an article on “Calvin and Beza” in
which he examined certain areas where it is claimed Beza differed from
Calvin.13 One of these is the extent of the atonement, and
Cunningham appears to be the first who referred to the following text of
Calvin as reflecting a presumption of definite atonement. “I should
like to know how the wicked can eat the flesh of Christ which was not
crucified for them, and how they can drink the blood which was not shed
to expiate their sins.”14
This
passage, found in a treatise on the Lord’s Supper destined to refute
the fiery Lutheran Tilemann Heshusius, is rendered stronger by the fact
that Heshusius, in good Lutheran fashion, did believe in universal
atonement and therefore would not find Calvin’s argument persuasive at
this point. But Calvin was so strongly oriented here that he appears to
have forgotten that Heshusius would not share his presuppositions!
William
Cunningham’s article, as is usual with this author, is a very solid
and searching study. In addition to discussing the important quotation
of Calvin noted above, Cunningham reasoned that Calvin’s emphatic
repudiation of a universal saving will and endorsement of election and
reprobation as well as his particularistic interpretation of passages
invariably appealed to by hypothetical universalists (1 Tim 2:4; 1 John
2:2) reflect a line of thought in which particular rather than universal
redemption finds a fitting place.15
Under
the title Christ in Our Place16 Paul van Buren
published in 1957 a doctoral thesis submitted to the University of Basel
in 1954. This deals with Calvin’s doctrine of the atonement as a
whole, but it contains significant statements about Calvin’s view of
the extent of the atonement. Van Buren emphasized Calvin’s endorsement
of the substitutionary character of the priestly work of Christ. He
quotes some passages of Calvin where a universal reference of Christ’s
work is indicated, and yet, says van Buren, “We find Calvin holding
back from the consequences of his own exegesis”17 in
limiting the redemptive impact of Christ’s death to the elect in
places where the Scripture used the word “all.” Thus the
universalist van Buren acknowledges particularistic elements in Calvin
and deals with them as if they were a failure to accept the logical
implications of his premises. Van Buren lays great stress on Calvin’s
affirmation of the universal call and of the penal substitutionary
nature of atonement, but he views particular election and redemption as
conflicting with Scripture and the remainder of Calvin’s theology.
This, however, is reading Calvin with Barthian glasses and van Buren’s
criticism of Calvin here is not very damaging, especially since at
several points in the book Calvin’s thought is presented as involving
a definiteness in Christ’s work centering on those of mankind who will
actually be redeemed.18
In
a very thought-provoking review of van Buren’s book,19 John
Murray notes that Calvin does assert the propriety of a universal offer
of salvation, but holds a “fast line of distinction between the elect
and the reprobate,” and specifically reflects on the particular
reference of the atonement in his comments on 1 John 2:2 and 1 Tim 2:4,
6. Furthermore, the close connection between the sacrifice of Christ and
saving union with Christ militates in favor of definite atonement.
In
1969 Brian G. Armstrong in his very able work Calvinism and the
Amyraut Heresy,20 expressed the view that Amyraut was a
true representative of the original Calvinian thought and that his
opponents (DuMoulin, Rivet, Spanheim, etc.) were the ones who by their
scholastic method had deviated from the direction articulated by the
Geneva Reformer. He quotes Calvin’s commentaries on John 3:16; Rom
5:10; Ezek 18:23; 2 Pet 3:9 and his sermons on Isaiah 53, 1 Tim 2:3–5,
and 2 Tim 2:19, as well as the passage from the Treatise on
Predestination in which Calvin refers to John 3:15. The most
significant of these texts will be adduced and weighed below, but we may
be bold to say that they do not appear to provide sufficient evidence to
warrant the statement that the position “that Calvin himself favored
the view that Jesus died only for the elect…flies in the face of the
evidence in Calvin’s writings,”21 or is “untenable.”22
Calvin’s distinction between the “secret” and the “revealed”
will of God, strongly emphasized by Armstrong as establishing a point of
correspondence between Amyraut and Calvin,23 does not provide
support by logical inference in favor of universal atonement and is in
fact regularly found in Reformed theologians, even those who by
Armstrong’s standards would be rated as having become
“scholastic.”
Norman
F. Douty published in 1972 a volume entitled The Death of Christ: A
Treatise Which Considers the Question: “Did Christ die only for the
Elect?” A revised and enlarged edition appeared in 1978.24
Douty refers repeatedly to Calvin and quotes his comments on Mark 14:24;
John 1:29; 3:16, 17 ; 12:47 ; 16:7; Rom 5:18; Gal 3:10, 11; Col 1:14
mostly to demonstrate that the words “all,” “world,” “many”
are construed by Calvin as having a race-wide reference. He also lists
the passages quoted by Armstrong and concludes his book with a reference
to Calvin’s last will and testament. The important words are as
follows: “…I…seek…to be washed and purified by the great
Redeemer’s blood, shed for the sins of the human race.”25
The
French original reads “shed for all poor sinners,” and the absence
of the article might favor the connotation “all kinds of poor
sinners.” The point of Calvin appears here not to be whether Christ
offered himself for the whole race or for the redeemed only—a matter
that would scarcely be relevant to the last will and testament—but
rather that Calvin’s hope of justification rested in God’s
willingness to receive “poor sinners” among whom Calvin did not
hesitate to number himself.
An
unpublished 197-page Th.D. dissertation of James William Anderson on
“The Grace of God and the Non-elect in Calvin’s Commentaries and
Sermons” was presented to the Faculty of New Orleans Baptist
Theological Seminary in 1976. The conclusion is that Calvin’s sermons
favor universal atonement. Unfortunately I have not yet had access to
this work mentioned by Robert Peterson (Calvin’s Doctrine of the
Atonement, 90).
1979
saw the appearance of R. T. Kendall’s Calvin and English Calvinism
to 1649.26 In this volume the author attempts to document
that there is a great chasm between Calvin’s theology and that of his
successor Beza, followed in turn by William Perkins and others and
culminating in the
Westminster
Assembly, which unconsciously was veering in the direction of
Arminianism rather than proceeding in the path delineated by Calvin.
This extremely paradoxical thesis appears to rest primarily upon the
observation that Calvin grounded the assurance of faith in the
conviction “that Christ died indiscriminately for all men”27
and included this assurance in the very “essence of faith.”28
The same position is espoused in Kendall’s essay on “The Puritan
Modification of Calvin’s Theology” in John Calvin: His Influence
in the Western World,29 a work otherwise in line with
traditional Calvinism. Kendall’s position was very vigorously disputed
in devastating reviews by A. N. S. Lane,30 W. Stanford Reid,31
and especially Paul Helm.32
On
the face of it Kendall’s view appears well-nigh incredible, for it
implies that practically all the Calvinist successors of Calvin from
Beza to Warfield and beyond, passing through the Synod of Dort delegates
and the members of the Westininster Assembly, were basically wrong
concerning the major direction of their theology. To call the
Westminster Assembly doctrine of faith “crypto-Arminian”33
is preposterous. Kendall’s position impugns also practically all the
Arminian theologians for failing to recognize that Calvin was their ally
in the matter of the extent of the atonement, and the Calvinists with
respect to the nature of faith! Frankly, it is easier to believe that
Kendall is wrong rather than this whole galaxy of theologians!
The
close connection posited by Kendall between universal atonement and the
assurance of faith must also be challenged, for universal atonement is
neither necessary nor sufficient for assurance. It is not necessary
since my understanding of how the work of Christ affects others is not
essential for a perception of how it affects me. It is not sufficient
since on Kendall’s showing, all covered by the atonement will not be
saved; assurance, if it is to be reliable, needs to be grounded in
something that actually makes a difference between the saved and the
lost.34
Kendall
devotes two pages to discussing Calvin’s view of the extent of the
atonement. Here he quotes largely the same passages of Calvin we have
encountered earlier,35 one of which is so wrested from its
context as to appear to have a meaning opposite to that which Calvin
explicitly delineated.36 An argument is also drawn from the
fact that Calvin did not object to the articles of the Council of Trent
where Christ’s death for all men is affirmed.37 But these
articles simply affirmed that no other remedy to original sin and no
other access to justification can be found in the whole world than
through the passion of Jesus Christ. In the midst of so many
questionable tenets of Trent it is understandable that Calvin would not
interpose an objection at this point. On the other hand in response to
Trent’s 15th Canon on justification in which personal assurance of
predestination is disallowed, Calvin asserts the possibility of it
although not its necessity, even though predestination, justification,
and adoption are particular, not universal blessings.38 In
terms of this logic it is difficult to see why Calvin should have
insisted on universal atonement as indispensable for the assurance of
faith!
Kendall
avers that Calvin distinguished sharply between expiation, which is
universal, and intercession, which is particular, as well as election.39
Yet Calvin says, “Whenever the death and passion of our Lord Jesus
Christ is preached to us, we must at the same time add the prayer that
He made.”40 The same close connection can be observed in
the Institutes 2.15.6 and in many other places.
Altogether
we find Kendall flatly asserting that Calvin held to universal atonement
on the basis of a handful of statements which are not compelling, to say
the least, and of a logical nexus between assurance and universal
atonement, which remains wholly unconvincing.41 On the other
hand he chose to disregard “certain statements by Calvin himself
which, some thought, support a different view” on the grounds that he
is “satisfied that what [he has] shown about Calvin’s position will
stand.”42 Others are doubtful about that.
In
Calvin’s Doctrine of the Atonement43 Robert A.
Peterson broaches the question of Calvin’s view on the extent of the
atonement at the very end of his dissertation. He is positive that
Calvin held to a universal offer of grace and rejected universal
salvation, but he holds that the diversity of the evidence concerning
Calvin’s position on the extent of the atonement prevents a conclusion
on this point.
In
an Appendix to his Ph.D. dissertation Curt D. Daniel discusses the
question, “Did John Calvin Teach Limited Atonement?”44
This is by far the most extensive treatment of this topic I have ever
seen. It provides more quotations of Calvin related to this precise
issue than any previous writer; it discusses adequately and fairly the
arguments advanced by those who have published materials in this area;
it has extensive bibliographies of previous studies; it takes cognizance
of three Aberdeen doctoral dissertations that were not available to me
by Robert Letham, Robert Doyle, and M. Charles Bell.45
Lest
it should appear that this study makes the present essay superfluous, it
must be added that Daniel’s conclusion is that Calvin held to
universal atonement, while I, even after examining the data and
arguments advanced by Daniel, remain convinced that the balance of
evidence favors the opposite view. Daniel makes a comment to the effect
that most of the contenders in this area tend to ascribe to Calvin the
view which they hold themselves, that is to say, they appear to have
yielded to the temptation to annex Calvin in support of their own
position! Unfortunately this remark,seems to apply also to Daniel’s
treatment and to the present article. One may hope, however, that in
spite of a natural bias there is enough objectivity in both
presentations to make them of some value.46
The
April 1983 issue of The Evangelical Quarterly was largely devoted
to the same subject. It contains two articles by authors who assert that
Calvin taught universal atonement (J. B. Torrance, M. Charles Bell), one
by P. Helm who denies it, and one by Tony Lane, who leaves the matter in
some suspense.
Charles
Bell47 examines certain Calvin passages which are quoted to
support a view of definite atonement. He argues that they do not carry
conviction, especially if it be acknowledged that in his biblicism
Calvin did not recoil from accepting the tension between particular
election and universal atonement. Bell also criticizes Kendall for his
disjunction of atonement and intercession which, Bell avers, did remain
indissolubly connected in Calvin’s thought.
J.
B. Torrance48 presses the thesis that the successors of
Calvin operated with a scholastic Aristotelian conception of God, which
in turn undermined the biblical idea of divine love, stiffened the
concept of God’s covenants with humanity, asserted the priority of law
over grace and thus damaged the thrust of Calvin’s biblical insights
and articulation. Torrance holds that the logic of the incarnation must
emphasize the priority of grace and love throughout God’s opera ad
extra, so as to manifest the perfect unity in triunity of the Father
who loves all his creatures, the Son who died for all, and the Spirit
who draws humans to the Father.49 Torrance does recognize a
mystery here, but he does not face sufficiently squarely the fact that
this construction leads to outright universalism (which is surely not
Calvin’s view) or introduces a fundamental disparity between the
Father’s and the Son’s saving will, which is universal, and that of
the Holy Spirit, which is particular. It is not surprising that he names
favorably Barth, Moltmann, and Rahner50 (to whom he
infelicitously conjoins the name of the Jansenist Pascal) and quotes
with great approval James Orr in a passage of Progress of Dogma
where Orr is critical of Calvin as well as of the later Calvinists! What
Torrance advocates here can in any case not be promoted in the name of
Calvin, even if some perplexity remains as to what his exact teaching
may have been concerning the extent of the atonement and the nature and
number of the covenants. Calvin’s endorsement of double
predestination, of the ultimate bifurcation of human destiny, and of the
forensic nature of the atonement is too clear to permit any doubt on
that score. Torrance is surprised that a supralapsarian like Samuel
Rutherford could also be “the saint of the covenant,”51
but this is not really puzzling to a thorough Calvinist.
Paul
Helm,52 whose work has already been noted with reference to a
critical appraisal of R. T. Kendall, wrote a stimulating article dealing
with the Covenant principle before Calvin, in Calvin, and after Calvin.
He marshalls evidence to show that certain well-formulated covenant
structures can be found in Augustine, that all essential features of
covenant theology, notably the covenant of redemption between the Father
and the Son and the covenant of works between God and Adam, as well as
the covenant of grace between God and the redeemed, have unmistakable
roots in Calvin’s theology. The later emphases, he avers, were
stimulated by the need to respond to the onset of Arminianism, but the
fundamental principles were in place in Calvin and a number of others
well before the beginning of the seventeenth century. It would be
difficult to imagine two articles more sharply conflicting than J. B.
Torrance’s and Paul Helm’s!
In
an exceptionally richly documented article, Tony Lane53
explores the position of Calvin over against later developments within
Reformed thought and over against some claims made with respect to
Calvin’s views by neo-orthodox scholars. On the specific question of
definite atonement, Lane presents the arguments on both sides of the
aisle and leaves the matter unresolved.54 In his conclusion
he warns that we should beware of pressing Calvin into a logical mold.55
This is very true, but should be tempered by the principle that we
should beware also of pressing him into an illogical mold!
One
dominant feature of Calvin’s hermeneutics and theology is his emphasis
upon divine grace as contrasted with every man-made or man-initiated
basis for preference. Thus for Calvin there is ultimacy in God’s
choice of some to be the recipients of his special favor, and this leads
to the doctrine of predestination, in fact of the gemina
praedestinatio. For Calvin there is radical disablement in man, so
that God’s grace is indispensable even for, we could say especially
for, the first movement of man’s soul away from sin and toward God.
Sinful man still functions as a human being, but his faculties have been
so encompassed and enmeshed by evil, his mind so darkened, his emotions
so debased, his will so weakened and misdirected, that he has become
totally unable to extricate himself from his plight and even to desire,
on his initiative, to be delivered and restored to the fellowship of
God. Thus only the efficacious, creative grace of God can accomplish the
miracle of regeneration by which a man, on the initiative of God and the
sovereign operation of the Holy Spirit, is effectually changed at the
very core of his being, and his dominant disposition oriented toward
God. Whenever God does accomplish this miracle he also safeguards the
new life thus implanted and brings it to ultimate maturity; thus grace
is seen as indefectible or inamissible. All of these positions are so
clearly delineated and so frequently asserted in Calvin that it appears
unnecessary to attempt here to substantiate them by quotations of, or
even references to, the texts.
A
sensitive point emerges, however, when one seeks to ascertain Calvin’s
assessment of the relationship of the work of Christ to this sovereign,
differentiating purpose of grace. Is Christ as mediator, in the thought
of Calvin, the representative of mankind at large, or did he come into
this world principally as the head of the covenant of grace and
specifically for the purpose of representing and redeeming the elect?
The answer to this question may not be as easy as may appear at first.
In
the first place, Calvin does not discuss it, at least not in the terms
to which we may have grown accustomed, in that part of the Institutes
where he deals with the sacrifice of Christ (2.16).
Secondly,
a certain ambiguity resides in some terms which are of crucial
importance in this connection. For instance, “all” may vary
considerably in extension: notably “all” may mean, all men,
universally, perpetually and singly, as when we say “all are partakers
of human nature”; or again it may have a broader or narrower reference
depending upon the context in which it is used, as when we say “all
reached the top of Everest,” where the scope of the discourse makes it
plain that we are talking about a group of people only which set out to
ascend the mountain. It is not always easy to determine with assurance
what is the frame of reference in view: hence controverted
interpretations both of Scripture and of individual theologians.56
The same remarks could be made about other terms such as “every,”
“world.” The pronoun “we” and related forms (“us,”
“our”) present sometimes a similar ambiguity: do they refer to “us
men,” or to “us Christians”?
In
the third place Calvin’s manifest emphasis upon a universal
indiscriminate call of the gospel to men may perplex the issue. Some
would contend that such a call presupposes a universal provision, and
tends to coalesce with it. Others insist that it is not so, and that the
universal statements in Calvin are keyed to the scope of the external
call and should be related to this only.
In
the presence of these factors which make a decision difficult, it is not
surprising that opinions as to Calvin’s position have varied. The
desire to have the support of this most capable theologian, or
conversely, to appear as different as possible from him, has no doubt
exerted some influence upon the conclusions reached by individual
scholars.
I.
Those who have asserted that Calvin held to a universal atonement have
advanced mainly the following arguments:
1.
Calvin, they urge, views Christ’s mediatorship to have a race-wide
reference and not to be restricted to the elective purpose of God.
This
argument is bolstered by a reference to Calvin’s Commentary on 1 Tim
2:5, or by an emphasis upon the cosmic significance of the work of the
Redeemer.
To
this we reply that there are manifestly certain benefits which accrue to
humanity at large and to the cosmos from the atoning work of Christ,
that Calvin is not loath to acknowledge these, but that the specific
purpose of Christ’s mediatorship is related to the impetration of
salvation, which is done for those whom the Father has given him, drawn
as they are from all imaginable categories in the human race, not from
some narrowly defined group, like the Jews, or the poor, or males, etc.,
but from gentiles, or the rich, or females, etc., as well. This is the
precise point of Calvin’s Commentary on 1 Tim 2:5.
he
universal term ‘all’ must always be referred to classes [genera]
of men but never to individuals [persona]. It is as if he had
said, ‘Not only Jews, but also Greeks, not only people of humble rank,
but also princes have been redeemed by the death of Christ.’ Since
therefore he intends the benefit of His death to be common to all, those
who hold a view that would exclude any from the hope of salvation do Him
an injury.57
It
is not fair to Calvin to separate the last sentence from the remainder
of the paragraph and to pretend on that basis that he advocates a
universal atonement. Calvin emphasized strongly the soteriological
character of Christ’s mediatorship.58 He specifically
rejects the speculations of Osiander and others as to whether Christ
would have been mediator and become incarnate if no redemption were
needed.59 This discussion takes more than two-thirds of the
chapter devoted to the necessity of mediatorship by the God-man. Some
passages of Calvin in which universal language appears may well be
explained from the vantage point of Calvin’s immense concern for the
exclusivity of Christ’s mediatorship as the only way of true access to
God, and contrasted with outlooks in which other intermediaries (Mary,
the saints) or other principles of acceptance with God (good works,
attainment in sanctification) were imagined to be effective. Here again
a study of Calvin’s Commentary on 1 Tim 2:5 will be instructive.
2.
In asserting, as he does repeatedly, the legitimacy of a universal,
indiscriminate offer of salvation to any and to all, Calvin, they urge,
presupposes a universal atonement as the logical necessary foundation
for such a call.
To
this we reply in acknowledging readily that Calvin does indeed assert
the propriety of, yea, the divine mandate for an indiscriminate call to
salvation addressed to any and all human beings that may be reached by
language. We furthermore believe that Calvin was right in line with
Scripture, and that those who would restrict the call to the elect are
mistaken. But the proposition that the prerequisite for an
indiscriminate call is a universal provision, which is the base of the
whole argument, appears to us palpably and demonstrably false. Most of
the well-meant offers and invitations, human as well as divine, are not
grounded in coextensive provision! All that is really requisite for a
well-meant offer is that, if the terms of the offer be complied with,
that which was offered will in fact be delivered. This is precisely what
occurs with the gospel (John 6:37), but no one fulfills the terms except
those whom the Father draws (John 6:44, 65). Whether or not God has made
a provision for those who do not come has nothing to do with the
sincerity of the offer. No solid argument can therefore be built in
favor of universal atonement on this basis.
3.
Calvin, they urge, takes at face value certain biblical texts which
appear to teach God’s universal saving will. Here Calvin’s
Commentaries on Ezek 18:32 and on 2 Pet 3:9 are often quoted.
To
this we reply that with respect to Ezek 18:32 as well as to 2 Pet 3:9,
Calvin expressly distinguished between the revealed, preceptive will of
God by virtue of which an appeal may be extended to all humans, and the
secret, decretive will of God which draws unto him only the elect. The
very strong language Calvin uses in his comments on these passages
relates to the obligation to present an indiscriminate universal
invitation, as already noted under 2 above.
4.
Calvin, they urge, asserts with Scripture that some for whom Christ died
may perish (Rom 14:15; 1 Cor 8:11) or will perish (Heb 10:29; 2 Pet
2:1). These texts, perhaps more than any others in Scripture, give the
advocate of definite atonement reason to pause and ponder. And Calvin
does not, either in his commentaries or in the Institutes,
provide any explanation of their relationship to the extent of the
atonement.
To
this we reply that in the context of the problem of weaker brothers,
Paul affirms that they will not perish but God will make them to stand
(Rom 14:4). Thus Paul’s statements do not so much represent an
expression of doubt as to God’s perseverance with his own for whom
Christ died, as a castigation of the selfishness of so-called
“strong” Christians who would give priority to their own exercise of
Christian liberty over the spiritual eternal interests of their weaker
brothers.
The
warnings of Hebrews and 2 Peter, on the other hand, do relate to people
who will ultimately be lost. They do not support universal atonement,
since the grounds of condemnation are the special privileges enjoyed by
these apostates including “being sanctified by the blood of the
covenant” and “being bought by the Master.” There is no way in
which these benefits can in these verses be extended to the universality
of mankind. If these apostates are thought to have been regenerate at
any time, however, it would appear that the scope of the atonement
exceeds the scope of ultimate salvation. This would also raise a
difficulty with the doctrine of perseverance. The solution may be found
in viewing the description of Hebrews and 2 Peter as expressing what the
apostates at one time professed to have rather than what they had in
fact.
This
is in any case what Calvin has opted for, as is apparent when he calls
the offenders of Heb 10:29 “hypocrites…usurping a place among the
faithful.”60 This is confirmed by his treatment of Heb
6:4–6 and 10:29 in the Institutes.61 Calvin’s
silence on the relationship of these four texts to the extent of the
atonement should not, in all fairness, be construed as an endorsement of
universal atonement, not any more than his silence in his commentaries
on the relation of these texts to the doctrine of perseverance provides
a substantial basis for affirming that Calvin did not believe in
perseverance. Other passages prove beyond dispute that he did believe in
it!
5.
Calvin, they urge, did repeatedly assert universal atonement as is
manifested from the following categories of statements culled from the Institutes,
the commentaries, the sermons, and the tracts.
a.
Christ suffered “for the redemption of mankind”62 or
“for the salvation of the human race.”63
He
ordained that Christ should be the Redeemer, who would deliver the lost
race of man from ruin.64
When
he says ‘the sin of the world,’ he extends this kindness
indiscriminately to the whole human race, that the Jews might not think
that the Redeemer has been sent to them alone.65
He
was condemned for our sins…to expiate all sins.66
b.
By Christ’s death “all the sins of the world have been expiated.”67
God commends to us the salvation of all men without
exception, even as Christ suffered for the sins of the whole world.68
Wipe away the iniquities of the world.69
Burdened
with the sins of the whole world.70 Paul makes grace common
to all men, not because it in fact extends to all, but because it is
offered to all. Although Christ suffered for the sins of the world, and
is offered by the goodness of God without distinction to all, yet not
all receive him.71 On him was laid the guilt of the whole
world.72 Our Lord Jesus was offered to all the
world…suffered for all.73
He
must be the Redeemer of the world. He must be condemned, indeed, not for
having preached the Gospel, but for us He must be oppressed…. He was
there, as it were, in the person of all cursed ones and of all
transgressors…. He was there in our name…. He forgot Himself in
order to acquit us before God…. It was all one to suffer the shames
and disgraces of the world, provided that our sins be abolished and we
be absolved from our condemnation.74
It is not enough to regard Christ as having died for the
salvation of the world: each man must claim the effect and possession of
this grace for himself personally.75
God is satisfied and appeased, for he bore all the
wickednesses and all the iniquities of the world.76
c.
Christ was there in the place of all sinners.
So
we see that Jesus Christ was laden with all our sins and iniquities.77
He
took upon himself and suffered the punishment that, from God’s
righteous judgment, threatened all sinners.78
…found before the judgment seat of God in the name of all
poor sinners.79 He willed to appear before the judgment seat
of God in the name of all poor sinners (for he was there as it were,
having to sustain all our burdens).80 To this we reply that this is indeed an impressive list
of statements, which could probably be extended still further. In a
number of cases, however, we note that the pronouns “we,” “us,”
and the adjective “our” appear in alternation with “mankind,”
“all,” etc. even within the quotations presented here,81
and that many times they appear in a larger immediate context that we
could not take the space to adduce here.82 Those to whom
Calvin refers by such pronouns are not merely members of the human race,
but are most commonly those who confess Jesus Christ as their Savior.
The context would be determinative in each instance.
In
some cases Calvin makes it clear that he contrasts the broad scope from
which the elect are drawn, with a narrow-minded outlook that would
restrict salvation to the Jews,83 or to a few people.84
In
the context of several of these quotations a major concern of Calvin is
to emphasize the exclusivity of the atoning impact of the cross in
contrast to those (especially the Roman Catholics) who posited other
mediators or other sources of merit.85
Calvin
is also concerned to express the sufficiency of the work of Christ so
that no one inclined to claim this work and to cast himself or herself
on the mercy of God should feel discouraged by thinking that somehow the
cross would not avail for him/her.86 This sufficiency is also
important with reference to the indiscriminate, universal offer of grace87
and to the personal guilt of those who reject this offer.88
Finally
in the context of many of the above quotations expressions are used that
connote the actual application or attainment of salvation, not merely an
impetration that would still await appropriation: “our sins are
forgiven” or “wiped away,”89 God is “satisfied” or
“appeased,”90 “we are justified,”91 “we
are exempt from condemnation,”92 “we may partake of the
Lord’s Table,”93 we are “saved,”94
“delivered,”95 “restored to life,”96
“reconciled.”97 In this respect, as in so many others,
Calvin’s language parallels very closely the usage of Scripture. (See
for instance Rom 5:18; 8:32 ; 1 Cor 15:22; 2 Cor 5:14; Heb 2:9; 1 John
2:2). Neither the Scripture nor Calvin can be fairly interpreted to
teach universal salvation, but the passages advanced as supporting
universal atonement simply do not stop there. It is of course legitimate
to distinguish, as Calvin clearly does, between impetration and
application,98 but it is improper to separate these, since
they always go together. The choice, therefore, is not between universal
atonement and definite atonement as properly representative of
Calvin’s theology, but rather between universal salvation and definite
atonement.
6.
Calvin, they urge, far from emphasizing the use of the word “many”
rather than “all” in passages like Isa 53:11, 12; Matt 20:28 (Mark
10:45); 26:28 (Mark 14:24); Rom 5:15, 19; Heb 9:28 (as upholders of
definite atonement are wont to do), on the contrary does interpret some
of them as connoting universality.
“Many”
sometimes denotes “all.”99
This
word “many” is often as good as equivalent to all. And indeed, our
Lord Jesus was offered to all the world.100
“Many”
is used not for a definite number, but for a large number…. And this
is its meaning also in Romans 5:15, where Paul is not talking of a part
of mankind but of the whole human race.101
The
word many does not mean a part of the world only, but the whole
human race.102
He
says many meaning all, as in Rom 5:15. It is of course certain that not
all enjoy the fruits of Christ’s death, but this happens because their
unbelief hinders them.103
To
this we reply that these quotations are indeed remarkable, since a good
opportunity to assert definite atonement is here obviously by-passed.
What is stated, however, is not different from the passages noted under
5c and the same kind of response would apply.
It
is interesting to note that conversely Calvin does occasionally state
that “all” refers to some parts of the race rather than the whole of
mankind.
No
nation of the earth and no rank of society is excluded from salvation,
since God wills to offer the Gospel to all without exception…. He is
speaking of classes and not of individuals, and his only concern is to
include princes and foreign nations in this number.104
Who
does not see that the apostle is here speaking of orders of men
rather than of individuals?105
He
expressly declares that salvation comes to all men, having especially in
mind the slaves…. He does not mean individuals, but rather all classes
of men.106
When
He says all, it must be limited to the elect….107
When
He says all it must be referred to the children of God, who are His
flock.108
We
are commanded to pray for all…[but] the prayers which we utter for all
are still limited to God’s elect. 109
II.
The following arguments may be advanced to support the contention that
definite atonement more closely approximates Calvin’s view.
1.
The strong structure of Calvin’s theology in terms of the divine
purpose does appear to imply this specific reference. It seems difficult
to imagine that Calvin would posit as the purpose of Christ an
indefinite, hypothetical redemption, when at so many other points it is
plainly apparent that the specific elective purpose of God is the
controlling feature of his outlook.
2.
Repeatedly Calvin asserts that God’s purpose of election is ultimate
and that we cannot go behind it! To assume a hypothetical redemptive
purpose more inclusive than the election of grace is doing precisely
what he precludes. It is difficult to assume that Calvin would open
himself to such self-contradiction.
Before
the first man was created, God in His eternal counsel had determined
what he willed to be done with the whole human race.
While
we are elected in Christ, nevertheless God reckons us among his own
prior in order to making us members of Christ.110
3.
Calvin makes it quite plain that he views repentance and faith and all
other recreative benefits of salvation to have been merited for the
elect by Christ. What Christ has accomplished on the cross is not so
much to secure the salvability of all humans, as actually to accomplish
the salvation of those whom he does redeem.
This
point is made very apparent in the whole chapter 17 of Book 2 of the Institutes
entitled, “Christ rightly and properly said
to have merited God’s grace and salvation for us.” We may also refer
to our note 98 where the relationship of repentance and faith to the
saving work of Christ is articulated in Calvin’s spirit.
4.
Calvin, as well as the Scripture itself, frequently conjoins in the same
sentence certain benefits which accrue only to the elect, with
references to the effects or intent of the death of Christ, e.g.
“Christ, who died for our trespasses, and was raised for our
justification” (Rom 4:25).111
In
this connection it is important to note that there is in Calvin a great
prevalence of the use of “we” (and related forms) with respect to
those who are viewed as elect and redeemed.112
5.
Calvin, following Scripture,113 conjoins closely the priestly
work of Christ in his substitutionary death with this priestly work as
intercessor.
First
He offered the sacrifice of His body, and shed His blood, that He might
bear the punishment due to us; and secondly, that the atonement might be
powerful He performed the office of an advocate, and interceded for all
who entered this sacrifice by faith.114
Whenever
the death and passion of our Lord Jesus-Christ is preached to us, we
must at the same time add the prayer that he made.115
Now
Christ’s intercession is specifically stated to be particular (John
17:9), and so it is represented by Calvin.116 This
undoubtedly is what has led R. G. Kendall to posit that Calvin assumed a
different scope for the oblation and the intercession of Christ. But
this position flies in the face of Calvin’s text, and has not received
wide acceptance, even among scholars who believe that Calvin held to
universal atonement. But if oblation and intercession are recognized to
be coextensive, they will both be universal or both be particular. The
clear-cut particularity of intercession becomes therefore a telling
argument for the equal particularity of the atonement.
6.
Calvin deals with texts which are usually associated with a universal
saving intent in a way which shows that he was mindful at that very
moment of the particular elective purpose of God. This is explicitly
brought to the fore in the commentaries in Ezek 18:32; John 3:16; 2 Pet
3:9. In the commentaries and sermons on 1 Tim 2:4 and Titus 2:13 the
word “all” is interpreted to refer to “all kinds or classes of
men.” In relation to John 1:29 and 1 John 2:2 the word “world” is
viewed as intending to transcend a nationalistic Jewish particularism.
Similar interpretations are to be found in the Institutes117
and in the Treatise on Predestination.118
Now
we have never met an upholder of universal atonement who would favor
such an interpretation. In fact we have never met one who would hesitate
to use all these texts in support of his/her view. Surely if Calvin held
to universal grace, he would not find it suitable, let alone necessary,
to provide such explanations for these passages. In fact, the greater
the confidence that such Scriptures do in fact teach universal grace,
the stronger the evidence that Calvin did not hold this doctrine, since,
according to this view, he would have been led to evade the clear
meaning of the texts in order to conform to the demands of his system.
7.
The embarrassment which some of Calvin’s universal expressions may
cause the upholder of definite atonement may be alleviated by the
consideration that Calvin meant to place special emphasis on the
indiscriminate call of the gospel.119 It is certainly in this
sense that Calvin himself interprets 2 Pet 3:9 and the same hermeneutic
may apply to his own statements.
8.
There are in Scripture as well as in Calvin passages where the
particular intent of Christ’s death is stressed. Christ gave himself
for his people (Matt 1:21), for his friends (John 15:13), for the sheep
(John 10:15), for his church (Eph 5:23–26; Acts 20:28), for us (Titus
2:14). Calvin’s commentaries on these passages,
as well as those on John 11:52 and Heb 2:9 reflect this particularity.
9.
Calvin’s statement in response to Heshusius, dealing with the
participation of unbelievers in the Lord’s Supper and quoted above,120
deserves special attention: “I should like to know how the wicked can
eat the flesh of Christ which was not crucified for them, and how they
can drink the blood which was not shed to expiate their sins.”
This
appears to be a categorical denial of universal atonement. Bell121
and Daniel122 have tackled this statement and attempted to
explain it as reflecting the viewpoint of unbelievers who were not
acknowledging the relevance to them of Christ’s work rather than
Calvin’s own position. But then the argument against Heshusius would
be very weak, since it was precisely his contention that the unbelievers
desecrated the Lord’s Supper by failing to discern the reality of
Christ in, with, and under the natural species as well as the universal
relevance of his atoning work. They manifested the latter form of
unbelief by failing to appropriate this work in repentance and faith.
10.
Calvin follows Scripture in the terms he commonly uses to describe the
atoning work of Christ: “reconciliation,” “redemption,”
“propitiation.” To these may be added the term “satisfaction,”
not found per se in Scripture, but commonly used by theologians.
All these terms connote an accomplishment that actually transforms the
relationship between God and the sinner. What kind of reconciliation
would be this, if estrangement continued and ultimately were to be
sealed for eternity? What kind of propitiation would be this, if God
continued to look upon the sinner as a child of wrath? What kind of
redemption would be this, where the captives would remain in bondage
after the ransom has been paid? What kind of satisfaction would be this,
where God would not be satisfied but still enact punishment in the day
of judgment? The language of Calvin does not fit a mere potential
blessing which remains ineffective pending some performance by the
sinner, which would then make it truly operative: it connotes a basic
act of God, who then sees to it that it is implemented unto the
salvation of all those he purposed to save.
11.
Calvin functions clearly with the concept of penal substitution,123
that is to say Christ on the cross underwent the divine penalty which
God would otherwise inflict on the sinner. Who does not see that if this
is so, and if the atonement is universal, no one will be punished at the
last judgment? But this is contrary to Scripture and to Calvin. It is
difficult to imagine that Calvin failed to perceive the necessary link
between substitution and definite atonement, or that, having perceived
it, he carried on without giving regard to this matter!
12.
Calvin’s strong trinitarian view would certainly lead him to recognize
a unity of purpose between the three Persons of the Godhead: Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit. But universal atonement introduces a fundamental
disjunction between the universal intent of the Son who gave himself for
all and the particular purpose of the Father who elected only some
people, and of the Holy Spirit, who confers regeneration, faith, and
repentance to the elect only. Here again it is difficult to imagine that
Calvin would remain unaware of such a fatal flaw at the heart of his
theology.
13.
A historical difficulty appears when we attempt to explain how Reformed
thought moved so quickly from Calvin’s alleged endorsement of
universal atonement to the very emphatic support of definite atonement
by all but one or two of the delegations at the Synod of Dort. What
happened in these fifty-five years to cause the Reformed community to
make such a drastic shift? Usually the name of Beza is associated with
this change, but can we really accept that his influence was so very
far-reaching that he practically single-handedly reverted the whole
trend in Reformed circles, putting himself at loggerheads not only with
Calvin, but as it is alleged, with Scripture itself, and this without
producing any major work centering on this topic? Somehow a lot more
light should be shed on this area before such an unlikely development
can be assumed to have taken place.
Our
conclusion, on balance, is that definite atonement fits better than
universal grace into the total pattern of Calvin’s teaching.
Taken
in part from the Westminster Theological Journal 47:2 (Fall
1985). |