Sep 05
Getting rid of a mean-minded God (art. XIII)
(This post is part of a series on the 39 articles of the Church of England)
It’s been a while since my last post in this series, and I think in part I’ve been delaying because I find the thirteenth of the Church of England’s articles of faith so viscerally unattractive. (I hope that my sense of repulsion has not totally affected my judgement!)
XIII Of Works before Justification
Works done before the grace of Christ, and the Inspiration of his Spirit, are not pleasant to God, forasmuch as they spring not of faith in Jesus Christ, neither do they make men meet to receive grace, or (as the School-authors say) deserve grace of congruity: yea rather, for that they are not done as God hath willed and commanded them to be done, we doubt not but they have the nature of sin.
I have already argued in previous posts in this series that this whole discussion on faith and works is carried out on entirely the wrong basis, and neither the overarching concepts nor the specific formulations have any real basis in Paul’s writings, from whence they are fundamentally claimed to flow.
Somewhere behind this article lies the fundamental assertion that one cannot earn God’s grace and love, nor bootstrap one’s way to salvation. That assertion, although expressed with different foci by Jews and Christians, Catholics and Protestants, seems to me to be central to the biblical vision, which stresses God’s prior initiative and our lives as needing to be responsive. But somewhere along the way, entangled in late mediaeval constructs, the article (and many other expressions of Reformation thought) obscures that central theme by turning God into some kind of morally deficient judge of a defective past creation, instead of the gracious sustainer of present creation, whose loving determination is active to bring all created being to its consummation.
The mercy of a God who judges all human deeds sinful unless they are performed by those that same mercy has brought to believe in Christ is scarcely mercy at all. In fact, whatever the article actually says, that can’t precisely be the Anglican reformers’ view, since they accept the salvation of the the faithful people of the Jewish covenants before Christ. Going further, it seems to me that they have no real active concept of non-Christians, and neither make provision for, nor develop a theology of, God’s mission in the world. The assumption is that, living in a Christian commonwealth, every citizen is either believer, heretic or apostate. This assumption is that everyone is baptized, and so this article probably needs to be read in that light as talking about what activates that baptismal seed within them, doing good deeds because one wishes to be loved, or doing good deeds because one has discovered that we are loved.
In today’s world, however, that Christendom assumption is plainly nonsense, and so the wording of the article seems even more nonsensical, if not simply appalling. If we truly have a vision of God’s creative and redemptive work (two different angles of looking at the same gracious purposeful loving action) focused and known in and through the sacrificial love of the Son of God who shares our humanity, then no person lives, speaks and acts without the grace of God sustaining their being, or themselves ever being less than the determined object of God’s love. How one comes to recognise that grace, and the ways in which people respond to that grace, are different questions for which the Church continues to need to work on its theology of mission — understood as embracing creation and redemption as its methods, and consummation as its goal.
It seems to me that some atheists have been very palpable gifts of God’s grace to me, some by their friendship, and the goodness I have found in them, others by their protest against distorted pictures of God the church has wittingly or unwittingly perpetrated, others again by their pursuit of truth in the light of their reason and courage, in the face of a church that has not liked the challenge of uncomfortable truths. I am not prepared to say that these are not good deeds pleasing to God. And I am certainly not prepared to say that these are anything other than the working of God’s grace (however much my atheist friends may dislike that assertion). I hope and pray that they might (somehow, somewhere, somewhen) come to know how to name the God of that grace with gratitude, but ultimately that is God’s business and theirs. In the meantime, I shall continue to name him and thank him for them.
In the light of my experience, the more generous reflections of our tradition (like the apologists’ logos spermatikos) and above all a more hopeful reading of scripture, I have rather more sense of God as the one in whom we all live and move and have our being, who will not be so easily frustrated in his creative purposes, and who above all delights far more in his creation than the wording of this article suggests.

September 6th, 2007 at 6:19 pm
I’m not sure I agree that there is an assumption here that everyone is a believer. Surely those in mind here are those who are not Christians at all, in other words as far as the authors were concerned Jews and “Saracens” as well as heretics, and perhaps ancient pagans. So the point of this is even more appalling than you suggest, it is that these people, however good they might seem, are entirely evil, and so killing them is justified - a conclusion which has hardly been rejected in some places.
See also the discussion of this kind of teaching in comments here.
How can you justify remaining an Anglican priest when you so thoroughly reject one of the articles on which the church is based, to which you assented (at least in general terms) at your ordination?
September 6th, 2007 at 10:07 pm
To answer your last question: I assented in the required phraseology that they had borne witness to the truth revealed in scripture. I believe that, and it’s part of why I think they’re worth engaging with in the kind of exercise I’m undertaking. I also note the role the articles give to scripture as a supreme rule of faith. In their own terms (and in a sense by their own authority) they may be legitimately criticised and rewritten on the basis of scripture. And if they say that even “councils of the church” might err, that is a fortiori true of the framers of the articles. I have no qualms of conscience whatsoever about my criticism of them in relation to my ordination. Of course, while I think they are reformable in theory, and that the church ought to have reformed them decades ago, I admit that in practice such a task would be almost impossible. But it is, I think, one of the fundamental axioms of all Churches of the Reformation (and one that with some nuances the RC Church could also sign up to) that under scripture, the church is ecclesia reformata semper reformanda
September 6th, 2007 at 11:41 pm
Thanks, Doug. A good answer. I have the currently required formula in my hand, from an ordination I attended recently.
The problem with the semper reformanda ideal is that the very existence of articles of religion, statements of faith, doctrinal bases etc contradicts it. Yet I also see the need for these statements, for self-definition and to avoid uncontrolled doctrinal drift. Some of the better evangelical organisations revise their doctrinal bases from time to time, not so much to shift their positions as to reflect current rather than past controversies. If the C of E had taken a similar approach this article would doubtless be very different by now.
September 10th, 2007 at 8:21 am
I just want to say how much I am enjoying this series.
September 10th, 2007 at 9:34 am
John, Thanks for the encouragement