Temporary Disciples
The Scholastic Reformer explains
why some people fall away.
Temporary
Disciples
by Dr.
Francis Turretin
XI. If the temporary
are sometimes called "disciples of Christ" and "sons of
God," "faithful" and "believers," it is either
according to opinion (kata doxan) (because they seem to be such
in the opinion of others) and out of the judgment of charity (because by
a profession of faith and reception of the sacraments, they mingle in
the public society of the church); but not according to the truth of the
thing. Hence Augustine says, "Certain persons are sons of God to
God, who are not such to us, and there are certain others, who on
account of grace received even temporarily, are called by us sons of God
and yet are not such in the sight of God" (Admonition and Grace
9 [20] [FC 2:269; PL 44.928]).
XII. Faith is not true
because it perseveres, but it perseveres because it is true. Thus
perseverance is not the cause of the verity of faith, but the consequent
and the effect—for because it has solidity and a deep root in the
heart, on this account it is constant and perpetually endures. As from
lightness arises liability to fall, so from solidity arises stability.
For although duration does not properly constitute the essence of a
thing, still it so follows it that from it a judgment can well be formed
concerning the truth of a thing a posteriori. Duration is an
index of truth, as truth is the principle of duration.
XIII. Nothing is said
of the temporary (Mt. 13) which proves that their faith agrees in kind
with justifying faith and differs only in degree. Not that "they
hear the word, and immediately receive it with joy" because that
reception is into the mind, not into the heart (as seed falling upon
stony places is received indeed upon the upper surface of the earth, but
does not penetrate farther). And the joy with which it is received is
not solid and true, arising from a fiducial sense of God's grace, but
from perishable things (to wit, the novelty and pleasantness of the
doctrine or even the hope of earthly advantage). Not that "the seed
springs up" (although it did not come to maturity) because that
superficial germination as it takes place in a different kind of ground,
so it ought to differ specifically from the intimate and true, which
brings forth good fruit. Not that "they do certain good
works," as is said of the Israelites that they seek God and are
pleased with the knowledge of his ways (Is. 58:2); of the Jews, who
exulted in the light of John the Baptist (Jn. 5:35); of Herod, that he
did many things after hearing him (Mk. 6:20). These are no other than
external good works (as to the substance of a work and moral virtue),
but not truly such as to the truth of the thing and the manner according
to which they ought to be done.
XIV. Heb. 6:4-6 does
not prove that the apostates were true believers and that their faith
was the same in kind as justifying faith. (1) The apostle speaks hypo-thetically,
not absolutely; for to parapesontas is the same as if he had said
"if they shall fall away" (ean parapesosi). From the
hypothetical to the absolute the consequence does not hold good,
unless the condition be posited. Nor did the apostle threaten to no
purpose because by such conditional threatenings God prevents the
renewed from falling, frightening them by the fickleness of the apostate
and exciting them to the desire of perseverance. And although the
condition on God's part and as to the event is impossible, it would be
very possible on the part of man left to himself. (2) Whatever is
ascribed to them can be predicated of the unrenewed and reprobate, who
can "be made partakers of the Holy Spirit" (if not as to the
fundamental and saving gifts of conversion and consolation, still as to
the initial gifts of illumination and conviction or even as to
extraordinary, miraculous and ministerial gifts). They can be
illuminated and have a knowledge of the truth, if not a practical and
consoling, yet a theoretical and constraining. They can "taste the
good word of God" with an outward and labial, but not an inner and
radical taste. They can "taste the powers of the world to
come," not so much by hope and joy (which are the first fruits of
heavenly glory) as with respect to miracles (which are often termed
powers and which were usually performed in the primitive church, which
is called the future age, "the world to come" [as in Heb. 2:5]
because it was such in the time of the fathers of the Old Testament).
They can "taste the heavenly gift" as to a participation of
faith, if not saving, still true in its kind and which could be obtained
only from heaven. (3) These things are ascribed to them rather
sacramentally and extrinsically (as to a profession of the truth and the
reception of baptism), than spiritually and internally (as to the
reception of faith without hypocrisy [anypokritou], which is the
gift without repentance [ametameleton] of the elect).
XV. Although the faith
of the temporary is true in its own order because it truly receives the
seed with joy and is not feigned by those who thus believe, who not only
think they believe, but really and truly believe (hence they are even
said "to believe," ]n. 2:23; Lk. 8:13), still it is not a true
and living justifying faith, in which sense it is even called
hypocritical because it is emulous of the faith of the elect and has an
external resemblance to it (although destitute of its truth); and so
great is its similarity to it often that a greater is not seen between
an image and its prototype. Hence not only others who see them are
easily deceived by them, but the believers themselves also are deceived
and impose upon themselves; not feigning, but believing that they are
truly believers (God alone, who searches the innermost recesses of the
heart, knowing the truth). Still it is certain that there is a
manifold and most essential difference (as was said before) which shows
that they mutually differ not only in degree or duration, but in very
kind and nature. |
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