Friday, December 28, 2012
Arminius on the Righteousness and Efficacy of the Providence of God Concerning Evil (Disputation 9)
DISPUTATION
9-ON THE RIGHTEOUSNESS AND EFFICACY OF THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD CONCERNING EVIL
Respondent: Ralph De Zyll
I. Among the causes and pretenses by which human ignorance has
been induced, and which human perverseness has abused, to deny the providence
of God, the entrance of evil (that is, of sin) into the world, and its most
wonderful and fertile exuberance, do not by any means occupy the lowest
stations. For since, with Scripture as our guide and Nature as our witness, we
must maintain that God is good, omniscient, and of unbounded power; (Mark x,
18; Psalm cxlvii, 5; Rev. iv, 8; Rom. i, 20;) and since this is a truth of
which every one is fully persuaded who has formed in his mind any notion of the
Deity; men have concluded from this that evil could not have occurred under the
three preceding conditions of the divine Majesty, if God managed all things by
his providence, and if it was his will to make provision respecting evil,
according to these properties of his own nature. And therefore, since, after
all, evil has occurred, they have concluded that the providence of God must be
entirely denied. For they thought it better to set up a God that was at repose,
and negligent of mundane affairs, especially of those in which a rational
creature’s freedom of will intervened, than to deprive Him of the honour of his
goodness, wisdom and power. But it is not necessary to adopt either of these
methods; and that it is possible to preserve to God, without disparagement,
these three ornaments of Supreme Majesty, as well as His providence, will be
shewn by a temperate explanation of the efficacy of God concerning evil.
II. A few things must be premised about this evil itself, as a
basis for our explanation. (1.) What is properly sin? (2.) Was it possible for
it to be perpetrated by a rational creature, and how? (3.) That a chief evil
cannot be granted, which may contend on an equality with the chief Good, as the
Manichees asserted; otherwise, of all the evils which can be devised, sin, of
which we are now treating, is, in reality, the chief; and, if we may speak with
strictness, sin is the only and sole evil; for all other things are not evils,
in themselves, but are injurious to some one.
III. 1. Sin is properly an aberration from a rule. This rule is
the equity which is preconceived in the mind of God, which is expressed to the
mind of a rational creature by legislation, and, according to which it is
proper for such a creature to regulate his life. It is therefore defined by St.
John in one compound word, anomia "the transgression of the law"; (1
John iii, 4;) whether such a law be preceptive of Good, or prohibitory of evil,
(Psalm xxxiv, 14,) hence the evil of commission is perpetrated against the
prohibitory part, and that of omission against the preceptive. But in sin, two
things come under consideration: (1.) The act itself, which has reference to
natural good; but under the act, we comprehend likewise the cessation from
action. (2.) Anomy, or "the transgression of the law," which obtains
the place of a moral evil. The act may be called the substance or material
cause of sin; and the transgression of the law, its form or formal cause.
IV. II. But it was possible for sin to be perpetrated by a
rational creature; for, as a creature, he was capable of declining or revolting
from the chief Good, and of being inclined towards an inferior good, and
towards the acts by which he might possess this minor good. As rational, he was
capable of understanding that he was required to live in a godly manner, and
what that equity was according to which his life and actions were to be
specially regulated. As a rational creature, a law could be imposed on him by
God, nay, according to equity and justice, it ought to be imposed, by which he
might be forbidden to forsake the chief good, and to commit that act, though it
was naturally good. The mode is placed in the freedom of the will, bestowed by
God on a rational creature, according to which he was capable of performing the
obedience which is due to the law, or could by his own strength exceed or
transgress its limits.
V. III. But since a chief evil cannot be allowed, it follows from
this, that, though evil be contrary to good, yet it cannot pass beyond the
universal order of that good which is chief, but can be reduced to order by
this chief good, and evil can thus be directed to good, on account of the
infinite wisdom of this chief good, by which he knows what is possible to be
made from evil; and on account of this power, by which he can make from this
evil what he knows may be made from it. Granting, therefore, that sin has
exceeded the order of every thing created, yet it is circumscribed within the
order of the Creator himself and of the chief good. Since it is apparent from
all these premises, that the providence of God ought not to intervene, or come
between, to prevent the perpetration of evil by a free creature; it also
follows, from the entrance of evil into the world, and it has entered so far
"that the whole world lieth in wickedness," (1 John v, 19,) — that
the Providence of God cannot be destroyed. This truth we will demonstrate at
greater length, when we treat upon the efficacy of the providence of God
concerning evil.
VI. We have already said, that, in sin, the act or the cessation
from action, and "the transgression of the law," come under
consideration: But the efficiency of God about evil, concerns both the act
itself and its viciousness, and it does this, whether we have regard to the
beginning of sin, to its progress, or to its end and consummation. The
consideration of the efficiency which is concerned about the Beginning of sin,
embraces either a hindrance or a permission; to which we add, the administration
of arguments and occasions inciting to sin; that which regards its Progress,
has direction and determination; and that concerning The End and Termination,
punishment and remission. We will refrain from treating upon the concurrence of
God, since it is only in reference to the act, considered, also, as naturally
good.
VII. The First efficiency of God concerning evil, is a hindrance
or the placing of an impediment, whether such hindrance be sufficient or
efficacious. (Jer. xxxi, 32, 33.) For it belongs to a good, to hinder an evil
as far as the good knows it to be lawful to do so. But a hindrance is placed
either on the power, on the capability, or on the will, of a rational creature.
These three things must also be considered in that which hinders. (1.) On the
power an impediment is placed, by which some act is taken away from the power
of a rational creature, to the performance of which it has an inclination and
sufficient powers. By being thus circumscribed, it comes to pass, that the
creature cannot perform that act without sin, and this circumscription is made
by legislation. The tasting of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was
thus circumscribed, when leave was granted to eat of all others: (Gen. ii, 17)
and this is the hindrance of sin as such; and it is placed by God before a
rational creature as he has the right and power over that creature.
VIII. (2.) On the capability also an impediment is placed. The
effect of this is, that the rational creature cannot perform the act, for the
performance of which he has an inclination, and powers that, without this
impediment, would be sufficient. But this hindrance is placed before a rational
creature by four methods: (1.) By depriving the creature of essence and life,
which are the foundation of capability. Thus was the attack upon Jerusalem
hindered, (2 Kings 19,) as was also the forcible abduction of Elijah to
Ahaziah, (2 Kings 1,) when, in the former instance, "an hundred fourscore
and five thousand men were slain by the angel of the Lord," and, in the
latter, two different companies, each containing fifty men, were consumed by
fire. (2.) The second method is by the taking away or the diminution of
capability. Thus Jeroboam was prevented from apprehending the prophet of the
Lord, by "the drying up of his own hand." (1 Kings 13, 4.) Thus, sin
is hindered, so as not to exercise dominion over a man, when the body of sin is
weakened and destroyed. (Rom. vi, 6.) (3.) The third is by the opposition of a
greater capability, or at least of one that is equal. Thus was Uzziah prevented
from burning incense unto Jehovah, when the priests resisted his attempt. (2
Chron. xxvi, 18, 21.) Thus also is "the flesh" hindered from
"doing what it would," "because the Spirit lusteth against the flesh,"
(Gal. v, 17,) and because "greater is He that is in us, than he that is in
the world." (1 John iv, 4.) (4.) The fourth method is by the withdrawing
of the object. Thus the Jews were frequently hindered from hurting Christ,
because He withdrew himself from the midst of them. (John viii, 59.) Thus was
Paul taken away, by the Chief Captain, from the Jews, who had conspired
together for his destruction. (Acts xxiii, 10.)
IX. (3.) An impediment is placed on the will, when by some
argument it is persuaded not to will to commit a sin. But we refer the
arguments by which the will is moved, to the following three classes. For they
are taken, (i.) either from the impossibility or the difficulty of the thing,
(ii.) from its unpleasantness or inconvenience, its usefulness or
injuriousness, (iii.) or from its being dishonourable, unjust and indecorous.
(i.) By the first of these, the Pharisees and Scribes were frequently prevented
from laying violent hands on Christ: (Matt. xxi, 46) for they were of opinion,
that he would be defended by the people, "who took him for a
prophet." In the same manner were the Israelites hindered from departing
to their lovers, to false gods; for God "hedged up their way with thorns,
and made a wall, so that they could not find their customary paths."
(Hosea ii, 6, 7.) Thus the saints are deterred from sinning, when they see
wicked men "wearied in the ways of iniquity and perdition." (Wisdom
v, 7.) (ii.) By the second argument, the brethren of Joseph were hindered from
killing him, since they could obtain their end by selling him. (Gen. xxxvii,
26, 27.) Thus Job was prevented from sinning "with his eyes" because
he knew what was "the portion of God from above, and what the inheritance
of the Almighty from on high," for those who have their eyes full of
adultery. (Job xxxi, 1, 2.) (iii.) By the third, Joseph was hindered from
defiling himself by shameful adultery, (Gen. xxxix, 8, 9,) and David was prevented
from "stretching forth his hand against the Lord’s anointed." (1 Sam.
xxiv, 7.)
X. The permission of sin succeeds, which is opposed to hindering.
Yet it is not opposed to hindering, as the latter is an act which is taken away
from the power of a rational creature by legislation; for, in that case, the
same act would be a sin, and not a sin. It would be a sin in reference to its
being a forbidden act; and it would be no sin in reference to its being
permitted in this manner, that is, not forbidden. But permission is opposed to
hindrance, in reference to the latter being an impediment placed on the
capability and will of an intelligent creature. But permission is the
suspension, not of one impediment or two, which may be presented to the
capability or the will, but of all impediments at once, which, God knows, if
they were all employed, would effectually hinder sin. Such necessarily would be
the result, because sin might be hindered by a single impediment of that kind.
(1.) Sin therefore is permitted to the capability of the creature, when God
employs none of those hindrances of which we have already made mention in the
8th Thesis: for this reason, this permission consists of the following acts of
God who permits, the continuation of life and essence to the creature, the
conservation of his capability, a cautiousness against its being opposed by a
greater capability, or at least by one that is equal, and the exhibition of an
object on which sin is committed. (2.) Sin is also permitted to the will; not
because no such impediments are presented by God to the will, as are calculated
to deter the will from sinning; but because God, seeing that these hindrances
which are propounded will produce no effect, does not employ others which He
possesses in the treasures of his wisdom and power. (John xviii, 6; Mark xiv,
56.) This appears most evidently in the passion of Christ, with regard not only
to the power but also to the will of those who demanded his death. (John xix,
6.) Nor does it follow from these premises, that those impediments are employed
in vain: for though such results do not follow as are in accordance with these
hindrances, yet God in a manner the most powerful gains his own purposes,
because the results are not such as ought to have followed. (Rom. x, 20, 21.)
XI. The foundation of this permission is (1.) The liberty of
choosing, with which God formed his rational creature, and which his constancy
does not suffer to be abolished, lest he should be accused of mutability. (2.)
The infinite wisdom and power of God, by which he knows and is able out of
darkness to bring light, and to produce good out of evil. (Gen. i, 2, 3; 2 Cor.
iv, 6.) God therefore permits that which He does permit, not in ignorance of
the powers and the inclination of rational creatures, for he knows them all,
not with reluctance, for he could have refrained from producing a creature that
might possess freedom of choice, not as being incapable of hindering, for we
have already seen by how many methods he is able to hinder both the capability
and the will of a rational creature; not as if at ease, indifferent, or
negligent of that which is transacted, because before anything is done he
already "has gone through" has looked over the various actions
which concern it, and, as we shall subsequently see, § 15-22, he
presents arguments and occasions, determines, directs, punishes and pardons
sin. But whatever God permits, He permits it designedly and willingly, His will
being immediately occupied about its permission, but His permission itself is
occupied about sin; and this order cannot be inverted without great peril.
XII. Let us now explain a little more distinctly, by some of the
differences of sin, those things which we have in this place spoken in a
general manner concerning hindering and permission. (i.) From its causes, sin
is distinguished into that of ignorance, infirmity, malignity and negligence.
(1.) An impediment is placed on a sin of ignorance, by the revelation of the
divine will. (Psalm cxix, 105.) (ii.) On a sin of infirmity, by the
strengthening influence of the Holy Spirit against the machinations or the
world and Satan, and also against the weakness of our flesh. (Ephes. iii, 16;
vi, 11-13.) (iii.) On a sin of malignity, by "taking away the stony heart,
and bestowing a heart of flesh," (Ezek. xi, 19,) and inscribing upon it
the law of God: (Jer. xxxi, 33.) (iv.) And on a sin of negligence, by exciting
in the hearts of believers a holy solicitude and a godly fear. (Mark xiv, 38;
Jer. xxxii, 40.) From these remarks those acts will easily be manifest, in the
suspension of which consists the permission of sins of every kind. God
permitted Saul of Tarsus, a preposterous zealot for the law, to persecute
Christ through ignorance, until "he revealed his Son in him," by
which act out of a persecutor was formed a pastor. (Gal. i, 13-15.) Thus, he
permitted Peter, who loved Christ, though he was somewhat too self-confident,
to deny Him through infirmity; but, when afterwards endued with a greater
energy of the Holy Spirit, he confessed him with intrepidity even unto death.
(Matt. xxvi, 70; Acts v, 41; John xxi, 19.) God permitted Saul, whom "in
his anger he had given to the Israelites as their king" (Hosea xiii, 11; 1
Sam. ix, 1,) through malignity to persecute David, of whose integrity he had been
convinced, (1 Sam. xxiv, 17-19,) while his own son Jonathan resisted his
father’s attempts against David in vain. And God permitted David, after
having enjoyed many victories and obtained leisure and retirement, to defile
himself with the foul crime of adultery at a moment when he was acting with
negligence. (2 Sam. 11.)
XIII. (2.) Sin, in the next place, is
distinguished with respect to the two parts of the law — that which is
perceptive of good, and that which is prohibitory of evil. § 3. Against
the latter of these an offense may be committed, either by performing an act,
or by omitting its performance from an undue cause and end. Against the former,
either by omitting an act, or by performing it in an undue manner, and from an
undue cause and end. To these distinctions the hindering and the permission of
God may likewise be adapted. God hindered Joseph’s brethren from killing him;
while he permitted them to spare his life, from an undue cause and end; for
since it was in their power to sell him, the opportunity for which was divinely
offered to them, they considered it unprofitable or useless to kill him. (Gen.
xxxvii, 26, 27.) Thus Absalom was hindered from following the counsel of
Ahithophel, though it was useful to himself and injurious to David; not because
he considered it to be unjust, but because of its supposed injury to David; for
he persisted in the purpose of persecuting his father, which he also completed
in fact. (2 Sam. 17.) God hindered Balaam from cursing the children of Israel,
and caused him to bless them; but so that he abstained from the former act, and
performed the latter, with a perverse mind. (Num. 23.) We shall in some degree
understand the reasons of this hindering and permission, if, while distinctly
considering in sin the act and the anomy or "transgression of the
law," we apply to each of them divine hindrance and permission.
XIV. But though the act, and "the
transgression of the law," are inseparably united in one sin, and
therefore neither of them can be hindered or permitted without the other; yet
they may be distinguished in the mind; and hindrance as well as permission may
be effected by God, sometimes chiefly with regard to the act, and at other
times chiefly with regard to "the transgression of the law," and,
when so done, they may be considered by us in these relations not without high
commendation of the wisdom of God and to our own profit. God hindered Joseph’s
brethren from killing him, not as it was a sin, (because He permitted them,
while remaining in the same mind to sell him,) but as it was an act. For they
would have deprived Joseph of life, when it was the will of God that he should
be spared. God permitted his vendition, not chiefly as it was a sin, but as an
act; because by the sale of Joseph as it was an act, God obtained his own end.
(Gen. xxxvii, 27.) God hindered Elijah from being forcibly brought to Ahaziah
to be slain, not as that was a sin, but as it was an act. This is apparent from
the end, and from the mode of hindering. From the end; because it was His will
that the life of his prophet should be spared, not lest Ahaziah should sin
against God. From the mode of hindering; because he destroyed two companies, of
fifty men each, who had been sent to seize him; which was a token of divine
anger against Ahaziah and the men, by which sin as such is not usually
hindered, but as it is an act which will prove injurious to another; yet,
through grace, sin is hindered as such. (2 Kings 1.) God permitted Satan and
the Chaldeans to bring many evils on Job, not as that was a sin, but as it was
an act: for it was the will of God to try the patience of his servant, and to
make that virtue conspicuous to the confusion of Satan. But this was done by an
act, by which, as such, injuries were inflicted on Job. (Job 1, 2.) David was
hindered from laying violent hands on Saul, not as it was an act, but as it was
a sin: this is manifest from the argument by which being hindered he abstained from
completing the deed. "The Lord forbid," said he, "that I
should stretch forth mine hand against the Lord’s anointed." This argument
deterred him from the sin as such. The same is also evident from the end of the
hindrance: for it was the will of God for David to come to the possession of
the kingdom through the endurance of afflictions, as a type of Christ the true
David. (1 Sam. xxiv, 7.) God permitted Ahab to kill Naboth, not as that foul
deed was an act, but as it was a sin: for God could have translated Naboth, or
taken him to himself, by some other method; but it was the divine will, that
Ahab should fill up the measure of his iniquities, and should accelerate his
own destruction and that of his family. (1 Kings 21.) Abimelech was hindered
from violating the chastity of Sarah, the wife of Abraham, both as it was an
act, and as it was a sin. For it was not the will of God, that Abimelech should
defile himself with this crime, because "in the integrity of his
heart" he would then have done it. It was also His will to spare his
servant Abraham, in whom indelible sorrow would have been produced by the
deflowering of his wife, as by an act. (Gen. xx, 6.) God permitted Judah to
know Tamar his daughter-in-law, both as it was an act, and as it was a sin:
because it was the will of God, to have his own Son as a direct descendant from
Judah; and at the same time to declare, that nothing is so polluted as to be
incapable of being sanctified in Christ Jesus. (Gen. xxxviii, 18.) For it is
not without reason that St. Matthew says, "Judas begat Phares and Zara of
Thamar"; and "David the king begat Solomon of her who had been the
wife of Urias"; (i, 3, 6;) and from whom in an uninterrupted line Christ
was born.
XV. But since an act, though permitted
to the capability and the will of the creature, may have been taken away from
its power by legislation; § 7; and since, therefore, it will very often
happen, that a rational creature not altogether hardened in evil is unwilling
to perform an act which is connected with sin, unless when some arguments and
opportunities are presented to him, which are like incentives to commit that
act; the management of this presenting of arguments and opportunities, is also
in the hands of the Providence of God, who presents these excitements. (1.)
Both to try whether it be the will of the creature to abstain from sinning,
even when it is excited by these incentives; since small praise is due to
abstaining in cases in which such excitements are absent. (S. of Syrach xx,
21-, 3; xxxi, 8-10.) (2.) And then, if it be the will of the creature to yield
to these incentives, to effect His own work by the act of the creature; not
impelled by necessity, as if God was unable to produce his own work without the
intervention of the act of his creature; but moved to this by the will to
illustrate his own manifold wisdom. Thus the arguments by which Joseph’s
brethren were incited through their own malice to wish to kill him, and the
opportunities by which it was in their power to send him out of their way, were
offered by Divine dispensation, partly in an intervening manner by the mediate act
of men, and partly by the immediate act of God himself. The arguments for this
malignity were, Joseph’s accusation, by which he revealed to his father the
wicked actions of his brethren, the peculiar regard which Jacob entertained for
Joseph, the sending of a dream, and the relation of the dream after it had
occurred. By these, the minds of his brethren were inflamed with envy and
hatred against him. The opportunities were, the sending of Joseph to his
brethren by his father, and the presenting of the Ishmaelites journeying into
Egypt, at the very moment of time in which they were in deliberation about
murdering their brother. (Gen. 37.) The preceding considerations have related
only to the Beginning of sin; to its Progress belong direction and determination.
§ 6.
XVI. The Direction of sin is an act of
Divine Providence, by which God in a manner the wisest and most potent directs
sin wherever he wills, "reaching from one end to another mightily, and
sweetly ordering all things." (Wisd. viii, 1.) We must consider in this
direction the point at which it has its origin and that at which it terminates.
For when God directs sin wherever he wills, it is understood that he leads it
away from the point to which it is not His will that it should proceed. But this
direction is two-fold, unto an Object, and unto an End. Direction unto an
Object is when God allows the sin which He permits, to be borne, not at the
option of the creature, towards an object which in any way whatsoever is
exposed and liable to the injury of sin; but which he directs to a particular
object, which on some occasions has either been no part of the sinner’s aim or
desire, or which at least he has not absolutely desired. The Scriptures
enunciate this kind of direction, generally, in the following words: "A
man’s heart deviseth his way; but the Lord directeth his steps." (Prov.
xvi, 9.) But, Specially, concerning the heart of a King: "As the rivers of
water are in the hand of the Lord, he turneth the heart of the king
whithersoever he will." (Prov. xxi, 1.)
Of which we have a signal example in Nebuchadnezzar, who, after he had
determined in his own mind to subjugate the nations, and hesitated whether he
should move against the Ammonites, or against the Jews, God managed the king’s
divinations so, that he resolved to march against the Jews, and to abstain from
an attack upon the Ammonites. (Ezek. xxi, 19- 22.)
XVII. Direction unto an End is, when God
does not allow the sin (which he permits,) to be subservient to the end of any
thing which the creature intends; but he employs it to that end which he
himself wills, whether the creature intend the same end, (which if he were to
do, yet he would not be excused from sin,) or whether he intend another, and
one quite contrary. For God knows how to educe the light of his own glory, and
the advantage of his creatures, out of the darkness and mischief of sin. Thus
"the thoughts of evil," which Joseph’s brethren entertained against
him, were converted by God into a benefit, not only to Joseph, but also to the
whole of Jacob’s family, and to all the kingdom of Egypt. (Gen. i, 20, 21.) By
the afflictions which were sent to Job, Satan endeavoured to drive him to
blasphemy. But by them, God tried the patience of his servant, and through it
triumphed over Satan. (Job i, 11, 12, 22; ii, 9, 10.) The king of Assyria had
determined "in his heart to destroy and cut off all nations not a
few." But God executed his own work by him, whom "he sent against an
hypocritical nation and the people of his wrath." (Isa. x, 5-12.) Nor is
it at all wonderful, that God employs acts, which his creatures do not perform
without sin, for ends that are pleasing to himself; because he does this most
justly, for three reasons: (i.) For He is the Lord of his creature, though that
creature be a sinner; because he has no more power to exempt or deliver himself
from the dominion of God, than he has to reduce himself into nothing. (ii.)
Because, as a creature endowed by God with inclination and capability, he
performs those acts, though not without sin, as they have been forbidden.
(iii.) Because the creature is a saw, in the hands of the Creator; and
instrumental causes do not reach to the intention of the first agent. (Isa. x,
15.)
XVIII. Determination is an act of Divine
Providence, by which God places a limit on his permission, and a boundary on
sin that it may not wander and stray in infinitum at the option of the
creature. The limit and boundary are placed by the prescribing of the time, and
the determination of the magnitude. The prescribing of the time, is the
prescribing of the very point or moment when it may be done, or the length of
its duration. (i.) God determines the moment of time, when he permits a sin, to
the commission of which his creature is inclined, to be perpetrated, not indeed
at the time when it was the will of the creature to commit it; but He wisely
and powerfully contrives for it to be done at another time. "The Jews
sought to take Jesus: but no man laid hands on him, because his hour was not
yet come." (John vii, 30.) "Yet when the time before appointed of the
Father" approached, Christ said to them, "This is your hour, and the
power of darkness." (Luke xxii, 53.) (2.) A limit is placed on the
duration, when the space of time in which the permitted sin could endure, is diminished
and circumscribed so as to stop itself. Thus Christ says, "Except those
days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved," &c. (Matt.
xxiv, 22.) But in this part of the discussion also, regard must be had to the
act as such, and to the sin as such. (i.) A limit is placed on the duration of
the act, in the following passages: "The rod of the wicked shall not rest
upon the lot of the righteous, lest the righteous put forth their hands unto
iniquity." (Psalm cxxv, 3.) "The Lord knoweth how to deliver the
godly out of temptations," &c. (2 Pet. ii, 9.) (ii.) A limit is placed
on the duration of the sin, in these passages: "Therefore I will hedge up
thy way with thorns, &c. And she shall not find her lovers: then shall she
say, I will go and return to my first husband." (Hosea ii, 6.) "In
times past God suffered all nations to walk in their own ways: but now he
commandeth all men every where to repent." (Acts xiv, 16; xvii, 30.)
XIX. A limit is placed on the magnitude
of sin, when God does not permit sin to increase beyond bounds and to assume
greater strength. But this also is done, with regard to it both as an act, and
as a sin. (i.) With respect to it as an act, in the following passages of
Scripture: God permitted "the wrath of their enemies to be kindled
against" the Israelites, but "he did not suffer them to swallow them
up." (Psalm cxxiv, 2, 3.) "There hath no temptation taken you, but
such as is common to man." (1 Cor. x, 13.) "We are perplexed, but not
in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed."
(2 Cor. iv, 8, 9.) God permitted Satan, first, "To put forth his hand upon
all that Job had," but not to touch him; (Job i, 12;) and, secondly,
"To touch his bone and his flesh, but to save his life." (ii, 6.)
"I will not destroy them by the hand of Shishak; nevertheless, they shall
be his servants." (2 Chron. xii, 7, 8.) (ii.) With respect to it as a sin,
God permitted David to resolve in his mind to destroy with the sword, Nabal and
all his domestics, and to go instantly to him; but he did not permit him to
shed innocent blood, and to save himself by his own hand. (1 Sam. xxv, 22, 26,
31.) God permitted David to flee to Achish, and to "feign himself
mad"; (1 Sam. xxi, 13;) but he did not permit him to fight, in company
with the army of Achish, against the Israelites, or by the exercise of fraud to
prove injurious to the army of Achish. (xxvii, 2; xxix, 6, 7.) For he could
have done neither of these deeds without committing a most flagrant wickedness:
though both of them might have been determined by David as acts, by
which great injury could be inflicted on those against whom it was the will of
God that no mischief should be done.
XX. On account of this Presenting of
incitements and opportunities, and this Direction and Determination of God,
added to the Permission of sin, God is said himself to do those evils which are
perpetrated by bad men and by Satan. For instance, Joseph says to his brethren,
"It was not you that sent me hither, but God": (Gen. xlv, 8;)
because, after having completed the sale of their brother, they were
unconcerned about the place to which he was to be conducted, and about his
future lot in life: but God caused him to be led down into Egypt and there to
be sold, and he raised him to an eminent station in that country by the
interpretation of some dreams. (xxxvii, 25, 28; xl, 12, 13; xli, 28-42.) Job
says, "The Lord hath taken away" what was taken away at the
instigation and by the aid of Satan; (Job 1 & 2;) both because that evil
spirit was of his own malice instigated against Job by God’s commendation of
him; and because, after having obtained power to do him harm, he produced no
further effect than that which God had determined. Thus God is also said to
have done what Absalom did; (2 Sam. xii, 11, 12; 15, 16;) because the principal
parts, in the various actions employed for producing this consummation,
belonged to God. To these we must add the remark, that since the wisdom of God
knows that if he administers the whole affair by such a presenting, direction,
and determination, that will certainly and infallibly come to pass which cannot
be done by the creature without criminality; and since His will decrees this
administration, it will more clearly appear why a deed of this kind may be
attributed to God.
XXI. Last in the discussion follow the
punishment and the pardon of sin, by which acts Divine Providence is occupied
about sin already perpetrated, as it is such, not as it is an act: for sin is
punished and pardoned as it is an evil, and because it is an evil. (1.) The
Punishment of sin is an act of the Providence of God, by which sin is
recompensed with the chastisement that is due to it according to the
righteousness of God. This punishment either concerns the life to come, or
takes place in the ages of the present life: the former is an eternal
separation of the whole man from God; the other, which is usually inflicted in
this life, is two-fold: corporal and spiritual. The punishments which relate to
the body, are various; but it is not necessary for our purpose to enumerate
them at present. But spiritual punishment deserves to be diligently considered:
for it is such a chastisement of sin, as to be also a cause of other sins
which follow on account of the wickedness of him on whom it is inflicted. It is
a privation of grace, and a delivering up to the power of evil or the evil
one. (i.) Privation of Grace is two-fold according to the two kinds of
grace, that which is Habitual and that which is Assisting. The former is the
taking away of grace, by blinding the mind and hardening the heart. (Isa. vi,
9, 10.) The other, is the withdrawing of the assistance of the Holy Spirit, who
is wont inwardly "to help our infirmities," (Rom. viii, 26,) and
outwardly to restrain the furious rage of Satan and the world, by employing
also the ministration and care of good angels. (Heb. i, 14; Psalm xci, 11.)
(ii.) A delivering up to the power of evil is, either "giving sinners over
to a reprobate mind," and to the efficacy of error, (Rom. i, 28; 2 Thess.
ii, 9-11,) or to the desires of the flesh and to sinful lusts, (Rom. i, 24,) or
to the power of Satan, "the god of this world," (2 Cor. 4,)" who
worketh powerfully in the children of disobedience." (Ephes. ii, 2.) But
because from this punishment arise many other sins, and this not only according
to the certain knowledge of God, by which he knows that if he thus punishes
they will thence arise, but likewise according to his purpose, by which he
resolves so to punish as, on account of more heinous sins thence committed, to
punish with still greater severity; therefore these expressions occur in the
scriptures: "But I will harden the heart of Pharaoh, that he shall not let
the people go; he shall not hearken unto you, that I may lay my hand upon
Egypt." (Exod. iv, 21; vii, 4.) "Notwithstanding, the sons of Eli
hearkened not unto the voice of their father, because the Lord would slay
them." (1 Sam. ii, 25.) "But Amaziah would not hearken to the answer
of Joash king of Israel; for it came of God, that he might deliver them into
the hand of their enemies, because they sought after the gods of Edom." (2
Chron. xxv, 20.) This consideration distinguishes the governance of God
concerning sins, so far as it is concerned about those sinners who are
hardened, or those who are not hardened.
XXII.
The Pardon or remission of sin is an act of the Providence of God, by
which the guilt of sin is forgiven, and the chastisement due to sin according
to its guilt is taken away. As this remission restores, to the favour of God,
the man who had before been an enemy; so it likewise causes the Divine
administration concerning him to be afterwards entirely gracious so far as
equity and justice require: that is, through this pardon, he is free from those
spiritual punishments which have been enumerated in the preceding paragraph;
(Psalm ii, 10-12;) and though not exempt from corporal chastisements, yet he is
not visited with them through the anger of God as the punisher of sin, but only
through the desire of God thus to declare that he hates sin, and besides so to
chastise as to deter him from falling again into it. (2 Sam. xii, 11-13.) For
which reason, the government of Providence with regard to this man is entirely
different from that under which he remained before he obtained remission.
(Psalm cxix, 67; 1 Cor. xi, 32; Psalm xxxii, 1-6.)
XXIII. From those topics on which we
have already treated, it is clearly evident, we think, that, because evils have
entered into the world, neither Providence itself, nor its government
respecting evil, ought to be denied. Neither can God be accused as being guilty
of injustice on account of this his governance; not only because he hath
administered all things to the best ends; that is, to the chastisment, trial,
and manifestation of the godly — to the punishment and exposure of the wicked,
and to the illustration of his own glory; (for ends, alone, do not justify an
action;) but, much more, because he has employed that form of administration
which allows intelligent creatures not only of their own choice or
spontaneously. but likewise freely, to perform and accomplish their own motions
and actions.
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