Grace, morality and freedom (art. X)
(This post is part of a series on the 39 articles of the Church of England)
Sometimes I find myself tempted to heresy by the way Christian doctrine is expressed by some people. The tenth of the Church of England’s articles leaves me feeling just so tempted. (You will have to judge whether I fall into heresy or not.)
X. Of Free Will
The condition of Man after the fall of Adam is such that he cannot turn and prepare himself, by his own natural strength and good works, to faith, and calling upon God: Wherefore we have no power to do good works pleasant and acceptable to God, without the grace of God by Christ preventing us, that we may have a good will, and working with us, when we have that good will.
First let me clear up a couple of potential linguistic confusions. In talking about “free will” the debate is not the one later associated with that term: the article is not talking about freedom and determinism, but about the freedom to perform moral acts. Secondly, that word “preventing” is an archaism for “going before.”
In a nutshell, we might paraphrase the main sense of this article as saying not simply: “You can’t pull yourself up to heaven by your own bootstraps” but more precisely: “You can’t do anything that makes you more acceptable to God.” Positively, and in line with the mainstream of Christian tradition, it affirms the absolute priority of God’s initiative in creating and relating to the world. Negatively, it can easily be read (perhaps misread) to suggest either that we are not ourselves capable moral agents, whose works can be good in themselves, or that there are categories of good works that aren’t pleasant and acceptable to God.
I have a double problem. First of course, I interpret the Fall as mythological and ahistorical, so that I have to speak about the human condition in ways somewhat different from the article. Secondly, I think that we have to talk about moral acts as free acts, and so that however we speak about grace it can’t be something that coerces specific acts, or makes them any less our acts. In fact, I have problems with the way in which we speak about grace as some kind of reified substance, rather than a fundamental attitude in, or attribute of, God’s own being.
I would want to affirm that we are in the process of becoming human, and the world on its way to becoming good creation, and that this is initiated, sustained and will be completed by God’s acting graciously. That gracious activity of God is focussed, revealed and empowered in created existence by the incarnation, death and resurrection of Jesus. God created (creates) and re-creates the world in such a way that he might enter into its estranged otherness, in order to bring it to completion. In that sense, our very existence, never mind our individual acts, depend on the prior gracious initiative of God, and his desire for our good.
Learning to become moral actors depends on being tuned in to that loving activity of God, which frees us from being constrained only to act in accord with nature, seeking our own benefit, or that of our immediate people group, according to the “morality” (to anthropomorphize) of evolution. So in that sense, only with the grace of God, can we act morally at all. But naming it as the grace of God comes from being able to see and experience that grace more fully in knowing oneself in relationship to God. In that sense, we can only affirm that we can do no good act without God’s gracious loving involvement, once we have come to see ourselves as existing because of, and in fulfilment of, that underlying and all-encompassing love.
What the article affirms is probably useless, if not repugnant, when taken as a statement to hit others over the head with in debate, especially in evangelistic debate. But if we see it as a way in which we are invited to tell our story, and see our lives in relationship with the one “in whom we live and move and have our being,” then it becomes a celebration of our calling into true moral capacity and God’s enabling power to lead us into a life of love.
August 8th, 2007 at 7:48 pm
I am glad you are doing this series, Doug. With this article I will need to comment on the tenses in: “we are in the process of becoming human, and the world on its way to becoming good creation.”
There needs to be a finality to the goodness that is already present - it is good, or the middle of Psalm 67 reflecting Abraham’s faith in God’s righteousness. There needs to be the already - not yet also which is implied by ‘process’ but I find that word insufficient on its own (though it is well used in Western legal procedings). Also related is the ambiguity of the word ‘moral’ - not that we don’t know what it is but that we cannot define the good without becoming ourselves the judge. Again it is a temporal aspect that is hard to put into words (impossible without poetry, myth, music, and story). To me, the work of God in us leads us into that fuller relationship that is astonishing in its fulness and you ‘know’ you would never have come into it ‘alone’ i.e. without Christ. How do we then come into it ‘together’? Here is what is obviously difficult - the evidence being sectarianism of all sorts - not to mention the potential difficulty of conversation of any kind.
that word ‘true’ in true moral capacity - - I think if one likes adjectives at all, that full might be stronger. Thinking of GML in Psalm 119 Gimel which I translated ‘Grow’ for the G.
I agree with all the other aspects of your brief note.
August 8th, 2007 at 8:04 pm
Bob, the idea of “the world on its way to becoming good creation” is not intended to deny the goodness of what is, only to highlight the mix of good and bad, or if you prefer, marred goodness, of what is. It relates back to what I argued towards the conclusion of this post.
August 8th, 2007 at 9:06 pm
Yes - how to read myth and history and our own distorted power - seeing the grace in the ‘troubles’ from Adam on and the gift of Christ through the new life in the Spirit as having dealt fully with the perceived ‘problem’ (whether ours or theirs). Yet the full dealing is not evident - hence Mark Nanos’ comment to me: how can you say the Messiah has come when the evidence of the Messianic age is not there?
In Christ the evidence is there - but is not evident to those who say it is not. Words fail. Stories of such evidence are stories - seen as fables. But to those who receive him … such power as they know they did not know. So there is a ‘past’ but there is an eternal encompassing it. Then the evidence chapter (John 5) says its name. I personally do not think the NT writers speak of a fall, rather of archetypes which we recapitulate. But, I might not have known in part, or have been known… Hence grace, not my doing, but definitely my treasure. So also to the Psalmist - and all to whom Christ is the servant (i.e. the circumcision).