der Geister im nachapostolischen Zeitalter" (i899); while a little earlier the Dutch theologian Beversluis issued a more comprehensive study, " De Heilige Geest en zijne werkingen volgens de Schriften des Nieuwen Verbonds" .(i896). Their investigation of the Biblical material, however, is not only very formal, but it is also dominated by such imperfect theological presuppositions that it can carry the student scarcely a step forward. Very recently something better in this respect has appeared in such books as Th: Meinhold's " Der heilige Geist and sein Wirken am einzelnen Menschen, mit besonderer Beziehung auf Luther" (i8yo, iamo, pp. 2a8); * W. kolling's " Pneumatologie, oder die Lehre von der Person des heiligen Geistes " 1894, 8vo, pp. 368); Karl von Lechler's " Die biblische Lehre vom heiligen Geiste " (r 899, 8vo, pp. 307) ; and K. t'. Nosgen's " Geschichte von der Lehrevom heiligen Geiste" (i8g9, 8vo, pp. 376)·,-which it is to be hoped are the beginnings of a varied body of scholarly works from the Lutheran side, out of which may, after a while, grow some such comprehensive and many-sided treatment of the whole subject as that which Dr. Kuyper has given our Dutch brethren, and now us in this English translation. But none of them provides the desired treatise itself, and it is significant that no one even professes to do so. Even where, as in the case of the booksw of Meinhold and von Lechler, the treatment is really topical, the author is careful to disclaim the purpose to provide a well-compacted; systematic view of the subject, by putting on his title-page a hint of a historical or exegetical point of view.
In fact, only in a single instance in the whole history of German theological literature-or, we may say, prior to Dr. Kuyper in the entire history of continental theological literature-has any one had the courage or found the impulse to face the task Dr. Kuyper has so admirably executed., We are referring, of course, to the great work on " Die Lehre vom heiligem Geiste,," which was projected by that theological giant, K. A. Kahnis, but the first part of which only was published-in a thin volume of three hundred and fifty-six pages, in 1847. It was doubtless symptomatic of the state of feeling in Germany on the subject that Kahnis never found time or encouragement in a long life of theological -pursuits to complete his
# Meinhold's book is mainly a Lutheran polemic in behalf of fundamental principles, against the Ritschlian rationalism on this subject.' As such its obverse is provided in the recent treatise of Rudolf Otto, " Die An. . schauung vom heiligen Geiste bei Luther" (i8g8).
BY PROF. BENJAMIN B. WARFIELD, D.D., LL D.,
Of Princeton Theological Seminary.
It is fortunately no longer necessary formally to introduce
Dr, Kuyper to the American religious public. Quite a number of his remarkable
essays have appeared of late years in our periodicals. These have borne such
titles as "Calvinism in Art," "Calvinism the Source and Pledge of Our
Constitutional Liberties," "Calvinism and Confessional Revision," "The
Obliteration of Boundaries," "The Antithesis between Symbolism and Revelation";
and have appeared in the pages of such publications as Christian Thought,
Bibliotheca Sacra, The Presbyterian and Reformed Review--not, we may
be sure, without delighting their readers with the breadth of their treatment
and the high and penetrating quality of their thought. The columns of The
Christian Intelligencer have from time to time during the last year been
adorned with examples of Dr. Kuyper's practical expositions of Scriptural
truth; and now and again a brief but illuminating discussion of a topic of
present interest has appeared in the columns of The Independent. The
appetite whetted by this taste, of good things has been partially gratified by
the publication in English of two extended treatises from his hand--one
discussing in a singularly profound way the principles of "The Encyclopedia of
Sacred Theology" (Charles Scribner's Sons, 1898), and the other expounding with
the utmost breadth and forcefulness the fundamental principles of "Calvinism"
(The Fleming H. Revell Company, 1899). The latter volume consists of lectures
delivered on "The L. P. Stone Foundation," at Princeton Theological Seminary in
the autumn of 1898, and Dr. Kuyper's visit to America on this occasion brought
him into contact with many lovers of high ideas in America, and has left a
sense of personal acquaintance with him on the minds of multitudes who had the
good fortune to meet him or to hear his voice at that time. It is impossible
for us to look longer upon Dr. Kuyper as a stranger, needing an introduction to
our favorable
notice, when he appears again before us; he seems
rather now to be one of our own prophets to whose message we have a certain
right, and a new book from whose hands we welcome as we would a new gift from
our near friend charged in a sense with care for our welfare. The book that is
at present offered to the American public does not indeed come fresh from his
hands. It has already been within the reach of his Dutch audience for more than
a decade (it was published in 1888). It is only recently, however, that Dr.
Kuyper has come to belong to us also, and the publication of this book in
English, we may hope, is only another step in the process which will gradually
make all his message ours.
Certainly no one will turn over the pages of this volume--much
less will he, as our Jewish friends would say, "sink himself into the
book"--without perceiving that it is a very valuable gift which comes to us in
it from our newly found teacher. It is, as will be at once observed, a
comprehensive treatise on the Work of the Holy Ghost--a theme higher than which
none can occupy the attention of the Christian man, and yet one on which really
comprehensive treatises, are comparatively rare. It is easy, to be sure, to
exaggerate the significance of the latter fact. There never was a time, of
course, when Christians did not confess their faith in the Holy Ghost; and
there never was a time when they did not speak to one another of the work of
the Blessed Spirit, the Executor of the Godhead not only in the creation and
upholding of the worlds and in the inspiration of the prophets and apostles,
but also in the regenerating and sanctifying of the soul. Nor has there ever
been a time when, in the prosecution of its task of realizing mentally the
treasures of truth put in its charge in the Scriptural revelation, the Church
has not busied itself also with the investigation of the mysteries of the
person and work of the Spirit; and especially has there never been a time since
that tremendous revival of religion which we call the Reformation when the
whole work of the Spirit in the application of the redemption wrought out by
Christ has not been a topic of the most thorough and loving study of Christian
men. Indeed, it partly arises out of the very intensity of the study given to
the saving activities of the Spirit that so few comprehensive Treatises on the
work of the Spirit have been written. The subject has seemed so vast, the
ramifications of it have appeared so far-reaching, that few have had the
courage to undertake it as a whole. Dogmaticians have, to be sure, been
compelled to present the entire
range of the matter in its appropriate place in
their completed systems. But when monographs came to be written, they have
tended to confine themselves to a single segment of the great circle; and thus
we have had treatises rather on, say, Regeneration, or Justification, or
Sanctification, on the Anointing of the Spirit; or the Intercession of the
Spirit, or the Sealing of the Spirit, than on the work of the Spirit as a
whole. It would be a great mistake to think of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit
as neglected, merely because it has been preferably presented under its several
rubrics or parts, rather than in its entirety. How easily one may fall into
such an error is fairly illustrated by certain criticisms that have been
recently passed upon the Westminster Confession of Faith--which is (as a Puritan
document was sure to be) very much a treatise on the work of the Spirit--as if
it were deficient, in not having a chapter specifically devoted to "the Holy
Spirit and His Work." The sole reason why it does not give a chapter to
this subject, however, is because it prefers to give nine chapters to
it; and when an attempt was made to supply the fancied omission, it was found
that pretty much all that could be done was to present in the proposed new
chapter a meager summary of the contents of these nine chapters. It would have
been more plausible, indeed, to say that the Westminster Confession
comparatively neglected the work of Christ; or even the work of God the Father.
Similarly the lack in our literature of a large number of comprehensive
treatises on the work of the Holy Spirit is in part due to the richness of our
literature in treatises on the separate portions of that work severally. The
significance of Dr. Kuyper's book is, therefore, in part due only to the fact
that he has had the courage to attack and the gifts successfully to accomplish
a task which few have possessed the breadth either of outlook or of powers to
undertake. And it is no small gain to be able to survey the whole field of the
work of the Holy Spirit in its organic unity under the guidance of so fertile,
so systematic, and so practical a mind. If we can not look upon it as breaking
entirely new ground, or even say that it is the only work of its kind since
Owen, we can at least say that it brings together the material belonging to
this great topic with a systematizing genius that is very rare, and presents it
with a penetrating appreciation of its meaning and a richness of apprehension
of its relations that is exceedingly illuminating.
It is to be observed that we have not said without
qualification
that the comparative rarity of such comprehensive
treatises on the work of the Holy Spirit as Dr. Kuyper's is due simply to the
greatness and difficulty of the task. We have been careful to say that it is
only in part due to this cause. It is only in the circles to which this English
translation is presented, to say the truth, that this remark is applicable at
all. It is the happiness of the Reformed Christians of English speech that they
are the heirs of what must in all fairness be spoken of as an immense
literature upon this great topic; it may even be said with some justice that
the peculiarity of their theological labor turns just on, the diligence and
depth of their study of this locus. It is, it will be remembered, to John
Owen's great "Discourse Concerning the Holy Spirit" that Dr. Kuyper points as
hitherto the normative treatise on the subject. But John Owen's book did not
stand alone in his day and generation, but was rather merely symptomatic of the
engrossment of the theological thought of the circle of which he was so great
an ornament in the investigation of this subject. Thomas Goodwin's treatise on
"The Work of the Holy Ghost in Our Salvation" is well worthy of a place by its
side; and its is only the truth to say that Puritan thought was almost entirely
occupied with loving study of the work of the Holy Spirit, and found its
highest expression in dogmatico-practical expositions of the several aspects of
it--of which such treatises as those of Charnock and Swinnerton on Regeneration
are only the best-known examples among a multitude which have fallen out of
memory in the lapse of years. For a century and a half afterward, indeed, this
topic continued to form the hinge of the theologizing of the English
Nonconformists. Nor has it lost its central position even yet in the minds of
those who have the best right to be looked upon as the successors of the
Puritans: There has been in some quarters some decay, to be sure, in sureness of
grasp and theological precision in the presentation of the subject; but it is
possible that a larger number of practical treatises on some element or other
of the doctrine of the Spirit continue to appear from the English press
annually than on any other branch of divinity. Among these, such books as Dr.
A. J: Gordon's "The Ministry of the Spirit," Dr. J. E. Cumming's "Through the
Eternal Spirit," Principal H. C. G. Moule's "Veni Creator," Dr. Bedford's "Vox
Dei," Dr. Robson's "The Holy Spirit, the Paraclete," Dr. Vaughan's "The Gifts
of the Holy Spirit"--to name only a few of the most recent books--attain a high
level of theological clarity
and spiritual power; while, if we may be permitted
to go back only a few years, we may find in Dr. James Buchanan's "The Office
and Work of the Holy Spirit," and in Dr. George Smeaton's "The Doctrine of the
Holy Spirit," two treatises covering the whole ground the one in a more
practical, the other in a more didactic spirit in a manner worthy of the best traditions
of our Puritan fathers. There has always been a copious stream of literature on
the work of the Holy Spirit, therefore, among the English-speaking churches;
and Dr. Kuyper's book comes to us not as something of a novelty, but as a
specially finely conceived and executed presentation of a topic on which we are
all thinking.
But the case is not the same in all parts of Christendom. If
we lift our eyes from our own special condition and view the Church at large,
it is a very different spectacle that greets them. As we sweep them down the
history of the Church, we discover that the topic of the work of the Holy
Spirit was one which only at a late date really emerged as the explicit study
of Christian men. As we sweep them over the whole extent of the modern Church,
we discover that it is a topic which appeals even yet with little force to very
large sections of the Church. The poverty of Continental theology in this locus
is, indeed, after all is said and done, depressing. Note one or two little
French books, by E. Guers and G. Tophel,1
and a couple of formal studies of the New-Testament doctrine of the Spirit by
the Dutch writers Stemler and Thoden Van Velzen, called out by The Hague
Society--and we have before us almost the whole list of the older books of our
century which pretend in any way to cover the ground. Nor has very much been
done more recently to remedy the deficiency. The amazing theological activity
of latter-day Germany has, to be sure, not been able to pass so fruitful a
theme entirely by; and her scholars have given us a few scientific studies of
sections of the Biblical material. The two most significant of these appeared,
indeed, in the same year with Dr. Kuyper's book--Gloel's "Der heilige Geist in
des Heilsverkündigung des Paulus," and Gunkel's "Die Wirkungen des heiligen
Geistes nach d. populär. Anschauung der apostolischen Zeit and der Lehre d. A.
Paulus" (2d ed.; 1899); these have been followed in the same spirit by Weienel
in a work called "Die Wirkungen des Geistes und
der Geister
im nachapostolischen Zeitalter" (1899); while a little earlier the Dutch
theologian Beversluis issued a more comprehensive study, "De Heilige Geest en
zijne werkingen volgens de Schriften des Nieuwen Verbonds" (1896). Their
investigation of the Biblical material, however, is not only very formal, but
it is also dominated by such imperfect theological presuppositions that it can
carry the student scarcely a step forward. Very recently something better in
this respect has appeared in such books as Th: Meinhold's "Der heilige Geist
and sein Wirken am einzelnen Menschen, mit besonderer Beziehung auf Luther"
(1870, 12mo, pp. 278);2
W. Kölling's "Pneumatologie, oder die Lehre von der Person des heiligen
Geistes" (1894, 8vo, pp. 368); Karl von Lechler's "Die biblische Lehre vom
heiligen Geiste" (1899, 8vo, pp. 307); and K. F. Nosgen's "Geschichte von der
Lehre vom heiligen Geiste" (1899, 8vo, pp. 376)--which it is to be hoped are the
beginnings of a varied body of scholarly works from the Lutheran side, out of
which may, after a while, grow some such comprehensive and many-sided treatment
of the whole subject as that which Dr. Kuyper has given our Dutch brethren, and
now us in this English translation. But none of them provides the desired
treatise itself, and it is significant that no one even professes to do so.
Even where, as in the case of the books of Meinhold and von Lechler, the
treatment is really topical, the author is careful to disclaim the purpose to
provide a well-compacted, systematic view of the subject, by putting on his
title-page a hint of a historical or exegetical point of view.
In fact, only in a single instance in the whole history of
German theological literature--or, we may say, prior to Dr. Kuyper in the entire
history of continental theological literature--has any one had the courage or
found the impulse to face the task Dr. Kuyper has so admirably executed. We are
referring, of course, to the great work on "Die Lehre vom heiligem Geiste,"
which was projected by that theological giant, K. A. Kahnis, but the first part
of which only was published--in a thin volume of three hundred and fifty-six
pages, in 1847. It was doubtless symptomatic of the state of feeling in Germany
on the subject that Kahnis never found time or encouragement in a long life of
theological pursuits to complete his
book. And, indeed, it was
greeted in theological circles at the time with something like amused amazement
that any one could devote so much time and labor to this theme, or expect
others to find time and energy to read such a treatise. We are told that a
well-known theologian remarked caustically of it that if things were to be
carried out on that scale, no one could expect to live long enough to read the
literature of his subject; and the similar remark made by C. Hase in the
preface to the fifth edition of his "Dogmatic," tho it names no names, is said
to have had Kahnis's book in view.3
The significance of Kahnis's unique and unsuccessful attempt to provide for
German Protestantism some worthy treatment of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit
is so great that it will repay us to fix the facts concerning it well in our
minds. And to this end we extract the following account of it from the
introduction of the work of von Lechler which we have just mentioned (p. 22
sqq.)
"We have to indicate, in conclusion, another circumstance
in the history of our doctrine, which is in its way just as significant for the
attitude of present-day science toward this topic as was the silence of the
first Ecumenical Council concerning it for the end of the first theological
age. It is the extraordinary poverty of monographs on the Holy Spirit. Altho
there do exist some, and in some instances important, studies dealing with the
subject, yet their number is out of all proportion to the greatness and the
extent of the problems. We doubtless should not err in assuming that vital
interest in a scientific question will express itself not merely in
comprehensive handbooks and encyclopedic compendiums, the latter of which are
especially forced to see to the completeness of the list of subjects treated,
but of necessity also in those separate investigations in which especially the
fresh vigor of youth is accustomed to make proof of its fitness for higher
studies. What lacunae we should have to regret in other branches of
theological science if a rich development of monographic literature did not
range itself by the fide of the compendiums, breaking out here and there new
paths, laying deeper foundations, supplying valuable material for the
constructive or decorative completion of the scientific structure! All this, in
the present instance, however, has scarcely made a beginning. The sole separate
treatise which has been projected on a really profound and broad basis of
investigation--the "Lehre vom heiligen Geiste" of K. A. Kahnis (then at
Breslau), 1847--came to a standstill with its first part. This celebrated
theologian, who had certainly in his possession in surprising measure the
qualities and acquisitions that fitted him to come forward as a preparer of the
way in this uncertain and little worthily studied subject, had set before
himself the purpose of investigating this, as he himself called it,
'extraordinarily neglected' topic, at once on its Biblical, ecclesiastical,
historical, and dogmatic sides. The history of his
book is exceedingly instructive end suggestive with respect to the topic
itself. He found the subject, as he approached it more closely, in a very
special degree a difficult one, chiefly on account of the rnanifoldness of the
conception. At first his results became ever more and more negative. A
controversy with the 'friends of light' of the time helped him forward. Testium
nubes magis juvant, quam luciferorum virorum importuna lumina. But God, he
says, led him to greater clearness: the doctrine of the Church approved itself
to him. Nevertheless it was not his purpose to establish the Scriptural
doctrine in all its points, but only to exhibit the place which the Holy Spirit
occupies in the development of the Word of God in the Old and New Testaments.
There was a feeling that came to him that we were standing upon the eve of a
new outpouring of the Spirit. But the wished-for dawn, he says, still held
back. His wide survey, beyond his special subject, of the whole domain of
science in the corporate life of the Church, is characteristic no less of the
subject than of the man. It was not given to him, however, to see the
longed-for flood poured over the parched fields. His exegetical 'foundation'
(chaps. i.-iii.) moves in the old tracks. Since he shared essentially the
subjective point of view of Schleiermacher and committed the final decision in
the determining conceptions to philosophy, in spite of many remarkable flashes
of insight into the Scriptures he remained fixed in the intellectualistic and
ethical mode of conceiving the Holy Ghost, tho this was accompanied by many
attempts to transcend Schleiermacher, but without the attaining of any unitary
conception and without any effort to bring to a Scriptural solution the burning
question of the personality or impersonality of the Spirit. Thefourth chapter
institutes a comparison between the Spirit of Christianity and that of
heathenism. The second book deals first with the relation of the Church to the
Holy Spirit in general, and then enters upon a history of the doctrine which is
carried, however, only through the earliest fathers, and breaks off with a
survey of the scanty harvest which the first age supplied to the succeeding
epochs, in which the richest development of the doctrine took place. Here the
book closes.4
Thus the only worthy attempt German theology has made to produce a comprehensive treatise on the work of the Holy Ghost remains a neglected torso till to-day.
If we will gather up the facts to which we have thus somewhat
desultorily called attention into a propositional statement, we shall find
ourselves compelled to recognize that the doctrine of the Holy Spirit was only
slowly brought to the explicit consciousness of the Church, and has even yet
taken a firm hold on the mind and consciousness of only a small section of the
Church. To be more specific, we shall need to note that the early Church busied
itself with the investigation within the limits of this locus of only
the doctrine
of the person of the Holy Ghost--His deity and
personality--and of His one function of inspirer of the prophets and apostles,
while the whole doctrine of the work of the Spirit at large is a gift to the
Church from the Reformation;5
and we shall need to note further that since its formulation by the Reformers
this doctrine has taken deep root and borne its full fruits only in the
Reformed churches, and among them in exact proportion to the loyalty of their
adherence to, and the richness of their development of, the fundamental
principles of the Reformed theology. Stated in its sharpest form this is as
much as to say that the developed doctrine of the work of the Holy Spirit is an
exclusively Reformation doctrine, and more particularly a Reformed doctrine, and
more particularly still a Puritan doctrine. Wherever the fundamental principles
of the Reformation have gone, it has gone; but it has come to its full rights
only among the Reformed churches, and among them only where what we have been
accustomed to call "the Second Reformation" has deepened the spiritual life of
the churches and cast back the Christian with special poignancy of feeling upon
the grace of God alone as his sole dependence for salvation and all the goods
of this life and the life to come. Indeed, it is possible to be more precise
still. The doctrine of the work of the Holy spirit is a gift from John Calvin
to the Church of Christ. He did not, of course, invent it. The whole of it lay
spread out on the pages of Scripture with a clearness and fulness of utterance
which one would think would secure that even he who ran should read it; and
doubtless he who ran did read it, and it has fed the soul of the true believer
in all ages. Accordingly hints of its apprehension are found widely scattered in
all Christian literature, and in particular the germs of the doctrine are
spread broadcast over the pages of Augustine. Luther did not fail to lay hold
upon them; Zwingli shows time and again that he had them richly in his mind;
they constituted, in very fact, one of the foundations of the
Reformation movement; or rather they provided its vital breath. But it was
Calvin who first gave them anything like systematic or adequate expression; and
it is through him and from him that they have come to be the assured possession
of the Church of Christ. There is no phenomenon in doctrinal history more
astonishing than the commonly entertained views as to the contribution made by
John Calvin to the development of Christian doctrine. He is thought of currently
as the father of doctrines, such as that of predestination and reprobation, of
which he was the mere heir,--taking them as wholes over from the hands of his
great master Augustine. Meanwhile his real personal contributions to Christian
doctrine are utterly forgotten. These are of the richest kind and can not be
enumerated here. But it is germane to our present topic to note that at their
head stand three gifts of the first value to the Church's thought and life,
which we should by no means allow to pass from our grateful memory. It is to
John Calvin that we owe that broad conception of the work of Christ which is
expressed in the doctrine of His threefold office of Prophet, Priest, and King;
he was the first who presented the work of Christ under this schema, and
from him it was that it has passed into a Christian commonplace. It is to John
Calvin that we owe the whole conception of a science of "Christian Ethics"; he
was the first to outline its idea and develop its principles and contents, and
it remained a peculium of his followers for a century. And it is to John
Calvin that we owe the first formulation of the doctrine of the work of the
Holy Ghost; he himself gave it a very rich statement, developing it especially
in the broad departments of "Common Grace" "Regeneration," and "the Witness of
the Spirit"; and it is, as we have seen, among his spiritual descendants only
that it has to this day received any adequate attention in the churches. We
must guard ourselves, of course, from exaggeration in such a matter; the bare
facts, when put forth without pausing to allow for the unimportant shadings,
sound of themselves sufficiently like an exaggeration.6
But it is simply true that these great topics received their first formulation
at the hands of John Calvin; and it is from him that the Church has derived
them, and to him that it owes its thanks for them.
And if we pause to ask why the formulation of the doctrine of the work of the Spirit waited for the Reformation and for Calvin, and why the further working out of the details of this doctrine and its enrichment by the profound study of Christian minds and meditation of Christian hearts has come down from Calvin only to the Puritans, and from the Puritans to their spiritual descendants like the Free Church teachers of the Disruption era and the Dutch contestants for the treasures of the Reformed religion of our own day, the reasons are not far to seek. There is, in the first place, a regular order in the acquisition of doctrinal truth, inherent in the nature of the case, which therefore the Church was bound to follow in its gradual realization of the deposit of truth given it in the Scriptures; and by virtue of this the Church could not successfully attack the task of assimilating and formulating the doctrine of the work of the Spirit until the foundations had been laid firmly in a clear grasp on yet more fundamental doctrines. And there are, in the next place, certain forms of doctrinal construction which leave no or only a meager place for the work of the personal Holy Spirit in the heart; and in the presence of these constructions this doctrine, even where in part apprehended and acknowledged, languishes and falls out of the interest of men. The operation of the former cause postponed the development of the doctrine of the work of the Spirit until the way was prepared for it; and this preparation was complete only at the Reformation. The operation of the second cause has retarded where it has not stifled the proper assimilation of the doctrine in many parts of the Church until to-day.
To be more specific. The development of the doctrinal system
of Christianity in the apprehension of the Church has actually run through--as
it theoretically should have run through--a regular and logical course. First,
attention was absorbed in the contemplation of the objective elements of the
Christian deposit, and only afterward were the subjective elements taken into
fuller consideration. First of all it was the Christian doctrine of God that
forced itself on the attention of men, and it was not until the doctrine of the
Trinity had been thoroughly assimilated that attention was vigorously attracted
to the Christian doctrine of the God-man; and again, it was not until the
doctrine of the Person of Christ was thoroughly assimilated that attention was
poignantly attracted to the Christian doctrine of sin--man's need and
helplessness; and only after that had been wrought fully out again could
attention turn to the objective provision to meet man's needs in the work of
Christ; and again; only after that to the subjective provision to meet his
needs in the work of the Spirit. This is the logical order of development, and
it is the actual order in which the Church has slowly and amid the throes of
all sorts of conflicts with the world and with its own slowness to believe all
that the prophets have written--worked its way into the whole truth revealed to
it in the Word. The order is, it will be observed, Theology, Christology,
Anthropology (Hamartialogy), Impetration of Redemption, Application of
Redemption; and in the nature of the case the topics that fall under the rubric
of the application of redemption could not be solidly investigated until the
basis had been laid for them in the assimilation of the preceding topics. We
have connected the great names of Athanasius and his worthy successors who
fought out the Christological disputes, of Augustine and of Anselm, with the
precedent stages of this development. It was the leaders of the Reformation who
were called on to add the capstone to the structure by working out the facts as
to the application of redemption to the soul of man through the Holy Spirit.
Some elements of the doctrine of the Spirit are indeed implicated in earlier
discussions. For example, the deity and personality of the Spirit--the whole
doctrine of His person--was a part of the doctrine; of the Trinity, and this
accordingly became a topic for early debate, and patristic literature is rich
in discussions of it. The authority of Scripture was fundamental to the whole
doctrinal discussion, and the doctrine of the inspiration of the prophets and
apostles by the Spirit was therefore asserted from the beginning with great
emphasis. In the determination of man's need in the Pelagian controversy much
was necessarily determined about "Grace,"--its necessity, its prevenience, its
efficacy, its indefectibility,--and in this much was anticipated of what was
afterward to be more orderly developed in the doctrine of the interior work of
the Spirit; and accordingly there is much in Augustine which preadumbrates the
determination of later times. But even in Augustine there is a vagueness and
tentativeness in the treatment of these topics which advises us that while the
facts relatively to man and his needs and the methods of God's working upon him
to salvation are firmly grasped, these same facts relatively to the personal
activities of the Spirit as yet await their full assimilation. Another step had
yet to be taken: the Church needed to wait yet for Anselm to set on foot the
final determination
of the doctrine of a vicarious atonement; and
only when time had been given for its assimilation, at length men's minds were
able to take the final step. Then Luther rose to proclaim justification by faith,
and Calvin to set forth with his marvelous balance the whole doctrine of the
work of the Spirit in applying salvation to the soul. In this matter, too, the
fulness of the times needed to be waited for; and when the fulness of the times
came the men were ready for their task and the Church was ready for their work.
And in this collocation we find a portion of the secret of the immense upheaval
of the Reformation.
Unfortunately, however, the Church was not ready in all its
parts alike for the new step in doctrinal development. This was, of course, in
the nature of the case: for the, development of doctrine takes place naturally
in a matrix of old and hardened partial conceptions, and can make its way only
by means of a conflict of opinion. All Arians did not disappear immediately
after the Council of Nice; on the contrary, for an age they seemed destined to
rule the Church. The decree of Chalcedon did not at once quiet all
Christological debate, or do away with all Christological error. There were
remainders of Pelagianism that outlived Augustine; and indeed that after the
Synod of Orange began to make headway against the truth. Anselm's construction
of the atonement only slowly worked its way into the hearts of men. And so,
when Calvin had for the first time formulated the fuller and more precise
doctrine of the work of the Spirit, there were antagonistic forces in the world
which crowded upon it and curtailed its influence and clogged its advance in
the apprehension of men. In general, these may be said to be two: the
sacerdotal tendency on the one hand and the libertarian tendency on the other.
The sacerdotal tendency was entrenched in the old Church; from which the
Reformers were extruded indeed by the very force of the new leaven of their
individualism of spiritual life. That Church was therefore impervious to the
newly formulated doctrine of the work of the Spirit. To it the Church was the
depository of grace, the sacraments were its indispensable vehicle, and the
administration of it lay in the hands of human agents. Wherever this
sacramentarianism went, in however small a measure, it tended so far to
distract men's attention from the Spirit of God and to focus it on the media
of His working; and wherever it has entrenched itself, there the study of the
work of the Spirit has accordingly more or less languished. It is easy indeed
to say that the Spirit stands behind the sacraments
and is
operative in the sacraments; as a matter of fact, the sacraments tend, in all
such cases, to absorb the attention and the theoretical explanations of their
efficacy as vested in the Spirit's energy tend to pass out of the vivid
interest of men. The libertarian tendency, on the other hand, was the nerve of
the old semi-Pelagianism which in Thomism and Tridentinism became in a modified
form the formal doctrine of the Church of Rome; and in various forms it soon
began to seep also into and to trouble the churches, of the Reformation--first
the Lutheran and after that also the Reformed. To it, the will of man was in
greater or less measure the decisive factor in the subjective reception of
salvation; and in proportion as it was more or less developed or more or less
fully applied, interest in the doctrine of the subjective work of the Spirit
languished, and in these circles too men's minds were to that degree distracted
from the study of the doctrine of the work of the Spirit, and tended to focus
themselves on the autocracy of the human will and its native or renewed ability
to obey God and seek and find communion with Him. No doubt here too it is easy
to point to the function which is still allowed the Spirit, in most at least of
the theological constructions on this basis. But the practical effect has been
that just in proportion as the autocracy of the human will in salvation has
been emphasized, the interest in the internal work of the Spirit has declined.
When we take into consideration the widespread influence that has been attained
even in the Protestant world by these two antagonistic tendencies, we shall cease
to wonder at the widespread neglect that has befallen the doctrine of the work
of the Spirit. And we shall have prosecuted our inquiry but a little way before
we become aware how entirely these facts account for the phenomena before us:
how completely it is true that interest in the doctrine of the work of the
Spirit has failed just in those regions and just in those epochs in which
either sacramentarian or libertarian opinions have ruled; and how true it is
that engagement with this doctrine has been intense only along the banks of
that narrow stream of religious life and thought the keynote of which has been
the soli Deo gloria in all its fulness of meaning. With this key in hand
the mysteries of the history of this doctrine in the Church are at once solved
for us.
One of the chief claims to our attention which Dr. Kuyper's
book makes, therefore, is rooted in the fact that it is a product of a great
religious movement in the Dutch churches. This is not the
place to
give a history of that movement. We have all watched it with the intensest
interest, from the rise of the free Churches to the union with them of the new
element from the Doleantie. We have lacked no proof that it was a
movement of exceptional spiritual depth; but had there lacked any such proof,--
it would be supplied by the appearance of this book out of its heart. Wherever
men are busying themselves with holy and happy meditations on the Holy Ghost
and His work, it is safe to say the foundations of a true spiritual life are laid,
and the structure of a rich spiritual life is rising. The mere fact that a book
of this character offers itself as one of the products of this movement
attracts us to it; and the nature of the work itself--its solidity of thought
and its depth of spiritual apprehension--brightens our hopes for the future of
the churches in which it has had its birth. Only a spiritually minded Church
provides a soil in which a literature of the Spirit can grow. There are some
who will miss in the book what they are accustomed to call "scientific"
character;7
it has no lack certainly of scientific exactitude of conception, and if it
seems to any to lack "scientific" form, it assuredly has a quality which is
better than anything that even a "scientific" form could give it--it is a
religious book. It is the product of a religious heart, and it leads the reader
to a religious contemplation of the great facts of the Spirit's working. May it
bring to all, into whose hands it finds its way in this fresh vehicle of a new
language, an abiding and happy sense of rest on and in God the Holy Ghost, the
Author and Lord of all life, to whom in our heart of hearts we may pray:
"Veni, Creator Spiritus,
Spiritus recreator,
Tu deus, tu datus cœlitus,
Tu donum, tu donator."
Princeton Theological Seminary,
April 23, 1900.
1 Guers' "Le Saint-Esprit: Étude Doctrinale et Practique " (1865); G: Tophel's "The Work of the Holy Spirit in Man" (E. T., 1882), and also more recently "Le Saint-Esprit; Cinq Nouvelles etudes Bibliques", (1899).
2 Meinhold's book is mainly a Lutheran polemic in behalf of fundamental principles, against the Ritschlian rationalism on this subject. As such its obverse is provided in the recent treatise of Rudolf Otto, "Die Anschauung vom heiligen Geiste bei Luther" (1898).
3 See Holtzmann in the Theolog. Literalurzeitung of 1896, xxv., p. 646.
4 Compare the remarks of Dr. Smeaton, op. cit., ed. 2, p. 396.
5 For the epoch-making character of the Reformation in the history of this doctrine cf. also Nösgen, op. cit., p. 2. "For its development, a division-line is provided simply and solely by the Reformation, and this merely because at that time only was attention intensely directed to the right mode of the application of salvation. Thus were the problems of the specially saving operation of the Holy Spirit, of the manner of His working in the congregation of believers cast into the foreground, and the theological treatment of this doctrine made of ever-increasing importance to the Church of Christ," etc.
6 So, for example, a careless reading of pp. 65-77 of Pannier's "Le Temoignage du Saint-Esprit "Gives the impression of exaggeration, whereas it is merely the suppression of all minor matters to emphasize the salient facts that is responsible for this effect.
7 Thus Beversluis, op. cit., speaks of it as Dr. Kuyper's bulky book, which "has no scientific value," tho it is full of fine passages and treats the subject in a many-sided way.