The Decrees of God
The Scholastic Reformer explains
the relationship of the decrees of God to God Himself, and all that he
decrees to take place in the world.
The Decrees of God
by Dr.
Francis Turretin
Question: Are there conditional decrees?
We deny against the Socinians, Remonstrants and Jesuits.
No distinction of God's decrees is more
frequently urged by the Socinians, Remonstrants and others who contend
for the idol of free will, than that of the absolute and conditional.
Yet none is attended with greater absurdities or has fewer claims to
acceptance. The design of the Socinians and their followers on this
subject is to confirm the figment of middle knowledge (scientia media),
to establish election from foreseen faith and to extol the strength of
the human will.
The question does not concern the
absolute or conditional decree a posteriori and consequently; or with
respect to the things decreed and the objects willed outside of God
(whether such decrees may be granted as either have no condition and
means in execution, or include something). For in this sense, we do not
deny that various decrees can be called conditional because they have
conditions subordinate to them (although it must be confessed that it is
a less proper way of speaking because the condition ought not to be
confounded with the means; and it is one thing for a thing to be decreed
under a condition, but another for it to be decreed as to be brought
about through such means). Rather the question concerns the decree
absolute or conditional a priori and antecedently on the part of the
decree itself (whether the decrees are such as are suspended upon a
condition containing power and of uncertain event outside of God; or
whether they are absolute, depending upon his good pleasure alone). The
Socinians and others assert the former; we the latter.
The reasons are: (1) every decree of God
is eternal; therefore it cannot depend upon a condition which takes
place only in time. (2) God's decrees depend on his good pleasure
(eudokia) (Mt. 11:26; Eph. 1:5; Rom. 9:11). Therefore they are not
suspended upon any condition outside of God. (3) Every decree of God is
immutable (Is. 46:10; Rom. 9:11). Now a conditional decree is mutable
because every condition is mutable (especially if not decreed by God,
but placed in the free will of man-such as is meant here). Hence, the
conditional decree ceasing, God would fail in his purpose and would be
obliged to enter upon new counsels by a second thought (deuteras
phrontidas). (4) It is repugnant to the wisdom and power of God to make
such decrees as de pend upon an impossible condition (which neither will
nor can be because he upon whom alone it depends does not will to grant
it). If this can take place in men weak and ignorant of the future, does
it not follow that it can take place in God-the most wise, omniscient
and omnipotent (to whom all things are not only foreseen but also
provided for)?
It is absurd for the Creator to depend
upon the creature, God upon man and the will of God (the first cause of
all things) upon the things them, selves. But this must be the case if
the decrees of God are suspended on any condition in man.
There is no middle knowledge (scientia
media) having for its object future conditional things Therefore there
is no conditional decree, usually placed under it as a foundation.
Conditional decrees cannot be granted
without supposing that he who decreed either was ignorant of the event
or that the event was not in the power of the one decreeing or that he
determined nothing certainly or absolutely concerning the event. All
this, being highly derogatory to God, cannot and ought not to be
ascribed to him.
Hence with great wisdom the French Synods
repeatedly proscribed the conditional decrees as inefficacious acts of
willing (velleitates) and deceitful and vain desires (being contrary to
the wisdom, power and constancy of God).
It is one thing to maintain that God has
not decreed to save anyone except through legitimate means; another that
the decree to save these or those persons through legitimate means is
conditional and of uncertain event (which the adversaries feign).
Although faith and perseverance are related as the condition
prerequisite to the decreed salvation (so that without them it ought not
to be expected), yet they hold not the relation of powerful conditions
to Go(Ts eternal decree of bestowing salvation upon this or that one in
Christ. Indeed so far from God having decreed salvation to them under
such a condition, on the contrary (by the very same decree by which he
decreed salvation to them) he also decreed faith and perseverance to
them and all the other means necessary for salvation.
It is one thing for the thing decreed to
be conditional; another for the decree itself. The former we grant, but
not the latter. There can be granted an antecedent cause or condition of
the thing willed, but not immediately of the volition itself. Thus God
wills salvation to have the annexed condition of faith and repentance in
the execution, but faith and repentance are not the condition or cause
of the act of willing in God, nor of the decree to save in the
intention.
Conditional promises and threatenings do
not favor conditional decrees because they do not pertain to the
decreeing will, but to the preceptive will and are appendages to the
divine commands, added to stimulate and excite men. So he who promises
and threatens under an uncertain condition does not predict or decree
what will actually happen, but only what may happen by the performance
or neglect of the condition. Hence such promises and threats show only
the necessary connection of the condition with the thing conditioned,
but involve no futurition of the thing. Now the decrees have a
categorical verity concerning the thing about to be or not about to be.
Although every hypothetical promise or
threat ought to be referred mediately to some decree upon which it
depends, it ought not to be a conditional, but an
absolute decree; not indeed concerning
the execution of the thing itself or its certain futurition, but only
concerning its infallible connection with another. For example, the
gospel proposition-to save sinners if they believe-is founded upon some
decree. Not indeed of the futurition of the thing (as if it decreed to
give salvation to all under the condition of faith), but of the
connection by which God willed indissolubly to join faith with
salvation. So when Paul threatens "death to those who live after
the flesh" (Rom. 8:13), it would be improper to infer that God had
made a conditional decree concerning the death of all if they live
according to the flesh; but only that God has joined together sin and
death by the most strict connection. Thus it is true that brutes would
have a sense of humor (risibiha), if they were rational. Yet no one
would say from this that God conditionally decreed that brutes should
have a sense of humor, if they were rational. It is sufficient for such
a proposition to be founded upon a general decree by which he willed a
sense of humor to be a property of reason and that reason should always
be attended by a sense of humor. In the same sense, I properly infer
that all sinners would be saved if they would believe-not from any
conditional decree, but from this most certain general truth which God
has sanctioned by his absolute decree (viz., that faith is the
infallible means of salvation). For as he has appointed faith as the
only way of bringing men to salvation, hence arises the truth of this
hypothetical proposition-if a sinner believes he will be saved (which
denotes only the certainty of consequence, but does not involve the
positing of the consequent).
The counsel which the Pharisees are said
to have rejected against themselves (Lk. 7:30) does not denote any
conditional decree concerning saving the Pharisees under the condition
of faith and repentance, but the will of command (viz., the
testimony of John concerning Christ by which God gave counsel to them
about the mode of obtaining eternal salvation, as the word
"counsel' is used in Ps. 107:11; Prov. 1:25, 30; Rev. 3:18 and
elsewhere).
In 1 Sam. 2:30 ("I said indeed that
thy house and the house of thy father, should walk before me forever;
but now the Lord saith, Be it far from me") and 1 S. 13:13
("If thou hadst kept the commandment of the Lord thy God, he would
have established thy kingdom forever), the promise was made to Saul on
the supposition of his obedience (which was not founded upon any
conditional decree concerning a thing which neither ever was, nor would
be, but only upon the connection established by God between piety and
life).
The various passages of Scripture which
speak of future things, this or that condition being fulfilled (such as
Gen. 20:7; 2 S. 17:1-3 with v. 14; 24:13; jet. 16:31 4; 17:24-26; 38:17,
18; 42:9, 10), do not favor any conditional decrees, but only denote
various promises and threats. Indeed they show the certainty of the
connection of one with the other: for example, of obedience and
preservation and salvation, of rebellion and destruction. But they do
not show the futurition of the event either absolute or conditional or
what God has particularly decreed concerning these or those things.
Therefore this is the more true, that since God (who has all things in
his own power) knows that such a condition will never take place (since
he himself has not decreed it), he cannot be said to have decreed
anything under that condition. For nothing can be conceived more absurd
than to maintain that God decrees something under a condition which at
the very moment of decreeing he knows never will take place.
Although the decrees (on the part of the
objects) often include some condition, they do not cease to be absolute
formally and in themselves because the condition and the thing
conditioned depend immutably upon God, either as to permission (as in
evil) or as to effecting (as in good things).
So far is God from changing his decrees
to suit the changes of men, that on the contrary every change of human
acts proceeds from the eternal and irrevocable decree of God (who in
this way brings to pass what he had decreed should take place through
promises and threats). Nor does he change his former opinion by the
prayers of the pious, but by those very prayers accomplishes what he had
determined should come to pass. Thus when God changes what he has made,
when he takes away from man the life he has given, when he destroyed the
world he had created, the change is in the things, not in God. For from
eternity, he decreed to make the change and unless he did so, the decree
to make the change would be changed.
The passage in Num. 14:30, where God
protests by Moses that the Israelites should not enter the land (which
he had promised them by a solemn oath) teaches indeed that the solemn
promise was made to that people by God of introducing them into the land
of Canaan, but under the condition of their obedience (which ceasing,
the promise and the contract also ceased). But it does not argue that
there was a conditional decree concerning their introduction. Indeed as
he had decreed to make such a promise, so for his own reasons he
determined to permit their contumacy and not to introduce an individual
of that generation into the Promised Land. Again, as the promise had
been made to the nation in general, it was not necessary that it should
refer to each individual in it and be fulfilled in them. It was
sufficient for it to apply to those who belonged to the fol. lowing
generation in whom it should be fulfilled.
Although the relative properties of God
(such as mercy and justice) suppose for their exercise in the objects
about which they are occupied, some quality (as for instance misery and
sin), it does not follow thence that the decree made concerning the
salvation or condemnation of men is conditional. For although it is
supposed in order to its formation, still it is not suspended on it, but
will be most certainly and infallibly fulfilled according to the good
pleasure of God.
Whatever is said against conditional
decrees applies equally to the hypothetical will because there can be no
act of will concerning future things out of itself which does not
involve the notion of a decree. Hence they cannot escape who, while
omitting the expression conditional decree, still retain the
hypothetical will; for they mean the same thing, the name only being
changed. |