[This is                 the full text of the complaint against Dr. Gordon H.                 Clark in 1944.  There could be typographical or transcription errors so please compare the pdf file at:  The Complaint.    Please let me know of any obvious errors so this transcript can be corrected.  Charlie J. Ray.  See also:  The Answer.]
The Text of a         Complaint
Against Actions of         the         Presbytery of Philadelphia      
In the Matter of         the         Licensure and Ordination of Dr. Gordon H. Clark
The
 following           is the full text of a complaint signed by a 
minority in the           Presbytery of Philadelphia of The Orthodox 
Presbyterian Church           against the action of that presbytery in 
the matter of the           licensure           and ordination of the 
Rev. Gordon H. Clark, Ph.D. The           complaint was           
presented and read on the floor of presbytery at its meeting           
on           November 20, 1944.
To         John P. Galbraith, Stated Clerk of The Presbytery of         Philadelphia:
And
         now, this sixth day of October, A.D. 1944, come under the      
   undersigned         and complain against the action of the Presbytery
 of         Philadelphia in         holding a “special meeting” of the 
Presbytery on July 7, 1944         and         against several actions 
and decisions taken at that meeting, to         wit:
1. The decision to find the call for the meeting in         order;
2. The decision to sustain the examination in theology         of Dr. Gordon H.         Clark;
3. The decision to waive the requirement of two years         of study in a         theological seminary;
4. The decision to proceed to license Candidate Gordon         H. Clark to         preach the gospel;
5. The action of licensing Dr. Gordon H. Clark;
6. The decision to deem the examination for licensure         sufficient for         ordination; and
7. The decision to ordain Dr. Gordon H. Clark at a         subsequent meeting         of the Presbytery called for that purpose.
In
         support of the complaint against the decision to find the call 
        for the         meeting in order the following considerations 
are set forth:
The
         special meeting of the Presbytery of Philadelphia held at the  
       Mediator Orthodox Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia on July 7, 
        1944         was an illegal meeting. In support of this 
conclusion the         following         evidence is cited:
1.
 a. The Form of the Government of the Orthodox         Presbyterian 
Church read,         “The presbytery shall meet on its own adjournment; 
and when any         emergency shall require a meeting sooner than the 
time to which         it         stands adjourned, the moderator, or, in
 case of his absence,         death,         or inability to act, the 
stated clerk, shall, with the         concurrence or         at the 
request of two ministers and two elders, the elders being         of    
     different congregations, call a special meeting” (Chapter X,       
  section 9).
 b. The Form of Government of the Orthodox Presbyterian         Church 
reads,         “And in the case of the moderator of the presbytery, he 
shall         likewise be empowered, on any extraordinary emergency, to 
        convene the         judicatory by a circular letter before the 
ordinary time of         meeting” (Chapter XIX, section 2).
 c. The moderator of the Presbytery of Philadelphia         when 
requested at the meeting of July 7, 1944 to state the         nature of 
        the emergency which provided the occasion for the special       
  meeting         offered no evidence of the existence of an emergency, 
        extraordinary         or otherwise. Rather, the moderator stated
 that the meeting was         justified because it suited the 
convenience of Dr. Gordon H.         Clark         and declared that 
other special meetings constituted a         precedence for         this
 meeting. Nor has any other evidence of the existence of an         
emergency been presented to the presbytery or the complainants.       
 d. Thus the meeting of the Presbytery of Philadelphia         on July 
7, 1944         was called, and held, in violation of the Form of 
Government of         the         Orthodox Presbyterian Church.
2.
 a. The provision of the Form of Government of the         Orthodox 
Presbyterian         Church quoted above are taken verbatim from the 
Form of the         Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., except that in 
the second         quotation the word “a” is a substitute for the word 
“his”. These         provisions have stood in the Form of Government 
since its         adoption by the Synod of New York and Philadelphia in 
1788,         preparatory to the convening of the first General Assembly
 in         the         following year.
Prior
         to 1788, the Synod of New York and Philadelphia, the parent of 
        the         General Assembly, and the highest judicatory then 
existing, had         been         governed by the action in 1729 of the
 Synod of Philadelphia in         declaring that they judge the 
directory for worship, discipline,         and         government of the
 church, commonly annexed to the Westminster         Confession, to be 
agreeable in substance to the word of God, and         founded 
thereupon, and therefore do earnestly recommend the same         to     
    all their members, to be by them observed as near as         
circumstances         will allow, and Christian prudence direct” 
(Records of the         Presbyterian Church in the United States of 
America,         Philadelphia,         (904, p. 95). Since that 
directory made no specific provision         concerning special 
meetings, the question arose, in the course         of         time, as
 to the calling of special meetings, and a query on the         subject 
was brought in to the Synod of New York and Philadelphia         in     
    1760, which query read as follows:
“How
         many ministers are necessary to request the moderator of the   
      commission of the Synod, or of any of our Presbyteries, to        
 oblige the         moderator to call any of these judicatures to do 
occasional         business?” The Synod replied to the query:
“The Synod judge, that meetings of judicatures, pro re           nata, can
 only be necessary on account of important         occurrences unknown 
at their last meeting, and which cannot be         safely         
deferred till their stated meeting, such as scandal raised on a         
minister's character, tending to destroy his usefulness, and         
bring         reproach on religion; or feuds in a congregation 
threatening its         dissolution; or some dangerous error, or heresy 
broached; but         not for         matters judicially deferred by the
 judicature, except some         unforeseen         circumstance occurs,
 which makes it appear that some principal         things         on 
which the judgment depends may then be had, and cannot be         
obtained         if it is deferred till their stated meeting; nor, for 
any         matters         that ordinarily come in at their stated 
meetings” (op. cit., p.         305).
This
         action constituted a precedent for the Form of Government when 
        it was         adopted in 1788 and illuminates its meaning. 
Furthermore the         action         was printed in Samuel J. Baird: A
 Collection of the Acts,           Deliverances, and Testimonies of The 
Supreme Judicatory of the           Presbyterian Church, from its Origin
 in America to the Present           Time,         the ancestor of the Presbyterian Digest, when it first         appeared in 1856. It was reprinted in the second edition. It was         carried over into The Presbyterian Digest by William E.         Moore         and still appears in the latest edition of the Digest,         that of         1938. It constitutes an unbroken tradition.
 b. The special meeting of the Presbytery of         Philadelphia of 
July 7,         1944 falls under the direct condemnation of this 
precedent,         since it         did not deal with an occurrence 
unknown at the last meeting, nor         with         a judicial matter,
 but did deal with a matter that ordinarily         “comes         in” 
at a stated meeting.
3. a. The term “pro re nata”
 was used in         connection with         special meetings by the 
Synod of 1760. It has been an historical         usage of the 
Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. since that time,         perhaps 
before it, in application to special meetings.  J.         Aspinwall    
     Hodge uses it in his What is Presbyterian Courts?         (Philadelphia, 1882).
The         definition of “pro re nata” in the Oxford English           Dictionary
 reads, “'for the affair born, i.e. arisen'; for         some         
contingency arising unexpectedly or without being provided for;         
for         an occasion as it arises” (vol. VIII, p. 1398).  J.         
Aspinwall Hodge, in the work just mentioned, says:
“When may 'pro re nata' meetings be called?
“They
 may be called 'on account of important         occurrences unknown at 
their last meeting, and which cannot be         safely         deferred 
till their stated meeting'” (p. 228).
 b. The meeting of July 7, 1944 thus violates not only         the Form 
of         Government of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, and the      
   historical         precedence and tradition of the Presbyterian 
church but the very         definition of a pro re nata meeting.
4.
 a. It has been argued that the Presbytery of         Philadelphia has  
       occasionally met in special sessions when no emergency was       
  present         and that precedent was thus established for such 
procedure. But         that         is only to say that Presbytery has 
at times erred in this         respect. It goes without saying that one 
error does not justify         another. However, the complainants hold 
that there is no         evidence that, as a         matter of fact, the
 Presbytery of Philadelphia has in other         instances         
transgressed the provisions of the constitution concerned. The         
minutes of the Presbytery of Philadelphia contained in the         
record         books of the Presbytery in August, 1944 record twenty-one
         special         meetings, as distinct from regular or adjourned
 meetings, whose         minutes have been approved to date.
Of
         that number, nineteen were concerned entirely with the approval
         of         the sending of calls, the reception of churches, the
         installation of         pastors, the dismissal of members, the 
erasure of the names of         members, the dissolution of pastoral 
relationships, the         notifying         sessions of dissolutions, 
the declaring of pulpits vacant, the         acceptance of resignations 
from offices in this connection, the         granting of permission to 
reside without the bounds of         presbytery and         the 
ordination of candidates without further examination. In         short, 
        they dealt either with changes of pastoral or ecclesiastical    
     status         which had arisen in the interval between stated 
meetings or were         for         the purpose of ordaining candidates
 without further examination.
Of
         the two remaining meetings, one was called in answer to a      
   special         request from the Redeemer Church and appointed a 
committee to         confer         with the congregation of that 
church; and the other was called         to         deal with the report
 of a committee to prepare an answer to the         request of the 
Presbytery of Ohio and was called in accordance         with         the
 direction of the previous regular meeting ordering the         
committee         to present its recommendations at the “earliest 
possible         moment”.
 b. The minutes of the Presbytery therefore indicate         that in the
 past         the Presbytery has held special meetings only when matters
         concerning         pastoral relationships or the ordination of 
men already examined         were         concerned, where a new matter 
had suddenly arisen, or where the         presbytery itself had directed
 action at the “earliest possible         moment”. No special meeting 
comparable to the meeting of July 7,         1944 has ever been held by 
the Presbytery of Philadelphia.
We         conclude therefore that the meeting of July 7th
 was         unconstitutional. It was clearly illegal in the light of 
the         specific requirements of the Form of Government that the 
calling         of         special meetings is justified only when an 
emergency exists. It         also         stands condemned in the light 
of historic precedent.
In
         the light of the foregoing considerations the complainants     
    request         that the meeting of the Presbytery of Philadelphia 
held on July         7,         1944 be found to have been illegally 
convened and that its acts         and         decisions and the acts 
and decisions issuing therefrom be         declared         null and 
void.
In
         support of the complaint against the actions and decisions     
    numbered 2         to 7 the following considerations are set forth:
I.
 The Christian doctrine of the knowledge of God is         distinguished
 as         well by its affirmation of the incomprehensibility of God as
 by         its         assertion of his knowability. The point does not
 need to be         labored         that the knowability of God lies at 
the very foundation of         Christianity. That God can be known, and 
that he has given a         knowledge of himself through his works and 
words, is pervasively         taught in the Scriptures. The possibility 
and actuality of true         religion depend upon the light and truth 
which God communicates         to         men. Skepticism and 
agnosticism are thoroughly anti-Christian.
In
         avoiding skepticism and agnosticism, however, Christianity has 
        been         insistent that the knowledge of God which is possible for men,         possible because of the fact of divine 
revelation, is not and         can         never become comprehension
 of God. The doctrine of the         incomprehensibility of God is as 
ultimate and foundational as         the         doctrine of his 
knowability. The doctrine of the         incomprehensibility         of 
God is not a mere qualification of his knowability; it is not         
the         doctrine that God can be known only if he makes himself 
known         and in         so far as he makes himself known. It is 
rather the doctrine that         God         because of his very nature
 must remain incomprehensible         to         man. The question of 
the power of God to reveal himself to man         does         not enter
 into the elements of this doctrine. Because of his           very           nature as infinite and absolute
 the knowledge which God         possesses         of himself and of all
 things must remain a mystery which the         infinite         mind of
 man cannot penetrate. The divine knowledge as divine, transcends human knowledge as human, 
even when that human knowledge is a knowledge communicated by God. Man may possess true knowledge as he thinks God's thoughts         
after him. But because God is God, the creator,, and man is man,        
 the creature,         the difference between the divine knowledge and 
the knowledge         possible to man may never be conceived of merely 
in quantitative         terms, as a difference in degree rather than a 
difference in         kind. Otherwise the Creator-creature relationship 
is broken down         at a most         crucial point, and there is an 
assault upon the majesty of God.
The
         doctrine of the divine incomprehensibility is not a 
specifically         Reformed doctrine. In view, however, of the 
peculiar emphasis of         the         Reformed theology upon the 
divine sovereignty and transcendence,         it         is not 
surprising that it has been most careful to state and         expound   
      it. As indicative of the place occupied by this doctrine in       
  Reformed         thought mention may be made of the fact that in the 
monumental         work         of Bavinck, the first subject treated 
under the doctrine of God         is         his incomprehensibility, 
and that, only after devoting 28 pages         to         this subject, 
does he proceed to deal with the knowability of         God.
A
         few quotations from Reformed writers will serve to set forth   
      more         adequately the classic doctrine of 
incomprehensibility. Calvin's         teaching, because of the unique 
place which his thought occupies         in         the history of 
Reformed thought, is of special interest. Calvin         says         
that the divine essence is incomprehensible, that his majesty is        
 not         to be perceived by the human senses, that what God is in 
himself         we         cannot know, that from the nature of the case
 we may learn from         his         divine activities only what he is
 to us, that it would be         presumptuous curiosity to attempt to 
examine into his essence,         that         rather we must be content
 to adore, to fear and to reverence him         (Institutes, v. 1, 9; ii. 2; x. 2; cf. Warfield,         Calvin           and Calvinism, pp. 150ff.).
Charnock
         sets forth the incomprehensibility of God both in his discourse
         entitled, “On God's Being a Spirit” and in that entitled, “On  
       God's Knowledge”:
“God
 is therefore a Spirit incapable of being seen,         and infinitely 
incapable of being understood. . . . There is         such a         
disproportion between an infinite object and a finite sense and         
understanding, that it is utterly impossible either to behold or        
 comprehend him.” (Discourses on the Existence and Attributes           of           God, New York, 1886, pp. 184f.).
“We
 cannot have an adequate or suitable conception         of         God: 
He dwells in inaccessible light; inaccessible to the         acuteness  
       of our fancy, as well as the weakness of our sense. If we could  
       have         thoughts of him as high and excellent as his nature,
 our         conceptions         must be as infinite as his nature. All 
our imaginations of him         cannot represent him, because every 
created species is finite;         it         cannot therefore represent
 to us a full and substantial notion         of an         infinite 
Being. . . . Yet God in his word is pleased to below         his        
 own excellency, and point us to those excellencies in his works,       
  whereby we may ascend to the knowledge of those excellencies         
which         are in his nature. But the creatures, whence we draw our  
       lessons,         being finite, it is utterly impossible to have a
 notion of God         commensurate to the immensitiy and spirituality 
of his being”         (idem, p. 196. See also pp. 183, 451, 358).
J.         H. Thornwell in his lecture on “The Nature and Limits of our         Knowledge of God” (Collected Writings,
 Vol. I, Richmond,         1871) also clearly draws a qualitative 
distinction between the         divine         knowledge and the 
knowledge that is possible to man. While the         whole         
discussion on pp. 104-142 is pertinent a few quotations must         
suffice         here:
“His
 infinite perfections are veiled under finite         symbols. It is 
only the shadow of them that falls upon the human         understanding”
 (p. 118).
“Again
 the difference betwixt Divine and human         knowledge is not only 
simply of degree. It is a difference in         kind. God's knowledge is
 not like ours, and therefore we         are utterly         unable to 
think it as it is in Him. We can only think it under         the        
 analogy of ours in the sense of a similarity of relations” (pp.        
 121f.).
“This
 protest is only a series of negations—it         affirms simply what 
God is not, but by no means enables us to         conceive what He 
really and positively is. It is the infinite         and         
absolute applied to the attributes which we are striving to         
represent. Still these negative notions are of immense         
importance. They are clear and pregnant confessions that there         
is a transcendent         reality beyond all that we are able to 
conceive or think in         comparison with which our feeble thoughts 
are but darkening         counsel         by words without knowledge” 
(p. 122).
“Most
 heresies have risen from believing the         serpent's         lie, 
that our faculties were a competent measure of universal         truth. 
We reason about God as if we possessed an absolute         knowledge. 
The         consequence is, we are lost in confusion and error. . . . It
 is         so         easy to slide into the habit of regarding the 
infinite and the         finite         as only different degrees of the
 same thing, and to reason from         one         to the other with 
the same confidence with which, in other         cases, we         
reason from the less to the greater, that the caution cannot be         
too         much insisted upon that God's thoughts are not our thoughts,
 nor         God's ways our ways” (pp. 140f.).
“Our
 ignorance of the Infinite is the true solution         of         the 
most perplexing problems which encounter us at every step in         the
         study of Divine truth. We have gained a great point when we 
have         found that they are truly insoluble—that they contain one  
       element         which we cannot understand, and without which the
 whole must         remain         an inexplicable mystery. The 
doctrines of the Trinity, of the         Incarnation, of the Prescience 
of God and the Liberty of Man,         the         Permission of the 
Fall, the Propagation of Original Sin, the         Workings         of 
Efficacious Grace, all these are facts which are clearly         taught;
         as facts they can be readily accepted, but they defy all 
efforts         to         reduce them to science. . . . Our wisdom is 
to believe and         adore”         (pp. 141f.).
Although
         Charles Hodge's particular treatment of the doctrine of        
 incomprehensibility is brief, it is to the point, and likewise         
bases         the doctrine upon the distinction in nature between the 
Almighty         and         the creature:
"When
 it is said that God can be known, it is not         meant         that 
He can be comprehended. To comprehend is to have a complete         and 
        exhaustive knowledge of an object. It is to understand its      
   nature         and its relations. . . . God is past finding out. We 
cannot         understand the Almighty to perfection. . . . Such 
knowledge is         clearly impossible in a creature, either of itself or of         anything         outside of itself” (Systematic Theology, I, p. 337).
“It
 is included in what has been said, that our         knowledge of God is
 partial and inadequate. There is infinitely         more         in God
 than we can have any idea of; and what we do know, we         know     
    imperfectly” (ibid.).
Shedd         is also worth hearing. He says:
“Man
 knows the nature of finite spirit through his         own         
self-consciousness, but he knows that of the Infinite spirit         
only         analogically. Hence some of the characteristics of the 
Divine         nature         cannot be known by a finite intelligence. 
For example, how God         can         be independent of the 
limitations of time and have an eternal         mode of         
consciousness that is without succession, including all events         
simultaneously in one omniscient intuition, is inscrutable to         
man,         because he himself has no such consciousness” (Dogmatic           Theology, I, p. 152).
“Although God is an inscrutable mystery, he is yet         an         object of thought” (idem, p. 156).
Finally,         a few sentences from Bavinck.
“This
 doctrine of the incomprehensibility of God         and         of the 
unknowability of his essence becomes also the point of         departure
 and the founational thought of Christian theology. God         is      
   not exhausted in his revelation, whether in creation or         
re-creation. He cannot fully communicate himself to his         
creatures because they         would then themselves have to be God. 
There is therefore no         adequate         knowledge of God” (Gereformeerde Dogmatiek, II, p. 10).
“There is no knowledge of God as he is in himself.         We         are men and he is
 the Lord our God. . . . He is         infinitely         far exalted 
above our conception, our thought, our language. He         is         
not to be compared with any creature. . . . He can be         
apprehended,         not comprehended. --Thus speaks the whole of 
Scripture and the         whole         of Christian theology. And when a
 superficial nationalism has         thought an adequate knowledge of 
God possible, Christian         theology has         always fought it 
most strenuously” (p. 23).
“The
 knowledge that we possess of God is altogether         distinctive. It 
can be called a positive knowledge in so far as         through it we 
recognize a being who is infinitely different from         all         
finite creatures. It is, on the other hand, negative because we         
cannot ascribe a single predicate to God as we conceive of such         a
         predicate in his creatures. And it is therefore analogical     
    because         it is the knowledge of a being who in himself is 
unknowable but         nevertheless can make something of himself known 
to his         creatures”         (p. 24).
“Christian
 theology beholds here an adorable         mystery. It is completely 
incomprehensible for us that and how         God can reveal         
himself and to an extent make himself known in the creature, the        
 eternal in time, the immeasurable in space, the infinite in the        
 finite, the unchangeable in change, being in becoming, that         
which is         already as if it existed in that which does not exist. 
This         mystery         is not to be comprehended, it can alone be 
gratefully         acknowledged”         (pp. 24f.)
“Mystery is the element in which theology lives”         (p.         1).
That
         this doctrine of the incomprehensibility of God as expounded by
         Reformed theology is the doctrine of the Confession of Faith,  
       II, 1,         and of the Larger Catechism, 7, cannot be doubted.
 In the nature         of         the case the doctrinal standards do 
not expound the meaning of         the         word “incomprehensible” 
where it is employed. Nevertheless, its         meaning does not remain 
uncertain because of its uniform         significance         in the 
history of Christian thought which constitutes the         background   
      of the formulation of these standards. The context provided by    
     the         standards themselves, moreover, serves to confirm this 
        conclusion. In describing God as “infinite in being and         
perfection” and as         “most absolute” (II, 1) and as having “all 
life, glory,         goodness, blessedness, in and of himself” and as 
being “alone in         and unto himself all-sufficient” (II, 2) the 
Confession clearly         conceives of the nature and attributes of God
 as beingg         infinitely         exalted above the nature and 
qualities of the creature whether         in         this life or in the
 life to come. More specifically, when it         speaks         of the 
knowledge of God as infinite (II, 2) that knowledge of         God is   
      evidently thought of as differing from the knowledge possible to  
       the         creature in a qualitative sense, and not merely in 
degree. And         nothing is more obvious than that in characterizing 
God as         “incomprehensible”, the Confession does not mean merely 
that God         is unknown unless he reveals himself. God does not become           less           incomprehensible through the historical process of revelation.
         Rather his incomprehensibility is viewed as an attribute of God
         as he         is in himself, without which he would not be God,
 as absolute         and         unalterable as his immutability, his 
omnipotence and the other         attributes referred to in the same 
sentence (II, 1). Now since         God         is incomprehensible, his
 revelation of himself cannot have the         purpose of providing an 
adequate or exhaustive knowledge of         himself;         the 
revelation is directed to the needs of men (Confession I,         1). 
Nor does the doctrine of the plainness of Scripture (I, 7)         mean 
that         the revelation which God has been pleased to give of 
himself is         meant         to be exhaustively understood. It is 
indeed inherently         perspicuous,         and it is plain to man in
 the sense that man “may attain unto a         sufficient understanding”
 of “those things which are necessry to         be known, believed, and 
observed, for salvation”, but this is         far         from implying 
that there are not mysteries set forth in the         divine         
revelation that are quite beyond the powers of the finite mind         
to         comprehend.
That
         this doctrine of the divine incomprehensibility is the teaching
         of         the Scriptures does not require any elaborate proof.
 The         doctrine is         taught in many passages and is implicit
 in the doctrine of the         divine         transcendence which is 
everywhere taught or presupposed in         Scripture. A few of the most
 explicit passages may be passed in         review. The         
proof-text supplied with the reference in the Confession is         Psalm         145:3. “His greatness is unsearchable.” Isaiah 40:28 also         states that “there is no searching of his understanding” while         Job 11:7 f.
 asks, “Canst thou by searching find out God? Canst         thou find 
out the Almighty to perfection? It is high as heaven:         what      
   canst thou do? Deeper than Sheol; what canst thou know?” In         
these         passages far more is taught than that man is dependent 
upon the         divine revelation for knowledge of God; there is a 
reverent         acknowledging of the exceeding greatness of God and of 
his         knowledge         which man as a creature cannot know in any
 adequate way. Even         more         clearly perhaps, the gulf which
 separates the divine knowledge         from         human knowledge is 
set forth in Isaiah 55:8, 9.
 “For my thoughts         are not your thoughts, neither are your ways 
my ways, saith         Jehovah. For as the heavens are higher than the 
earth, so are my         ways higher         than your ways, and my 
thoughts than your thoughts.” In I         Timothy         6:16
 the Lord of Lords is described as “dwelling in light         
unapproachable, whom no man hath seen or can see”, thus         
indicating         not merely that God is invisible because of his 
spirituality but         also         that the light in which God dwells
 is so glorious that man the         creature may never trespass or even
 draw near to contemplate God         as         he is in himself. Only 
the divine Son has that adequate         knowledge of         God which 
makes a revelation of God possible (John 1:18; 6:46).
         Only         the Son has a knowledge of the Father that is on a
 level with         the         Father's knowledge of the Son; only the 
Son's knowledge of the         Father         is exhaustive knowledge; 
the knowledge which men may come to         possess         of the 
Father and of the Son is knowledge on a lower level,         
apprehension but not comprehension, for otherwise mere men would        
 have         to be accorded a place alongside of Christ who alone 
“knows the         Father” (Mt. 11:27; Luke 10:22. Cf. Also Romans 11:33;         Deuteronomy 29:29).
Now
         the         judgment to which with deep sorrow we have been 
compelled to         come is         that the doctrine of the knowledge 
of God which was set forth         before         the Presbytery of 
Philadelphia by Dr. Clark is very far from         being in         
agreement with the high view of Scripture and of the Confession         
and         Catchisms as that has been expounded above. It is true 
indeed         that         Dr. Clark accepts the term 
“incomprehensible” as a quality of         God. But the issue of course 
is not settled by the bare         acceptance         of the language of
 the standards. The modernists in our day have         freqently 
indicated a readiness to accept the language of the         historic 
creeds, but have reinterpreted that language to mean         something 
sharply at variance with their historic meaning. It is         our      
   contention that Dr. Clark's view of the incomprehensibility of       
  God is         definitely at variance with the meaning that this 
doctrine has         had in         Christian theology.
In
         expounding Dr. Clark's views we appeal to the stenographic     
    record of         his examination before the presbytery. The record 
is far from         accurate in detail but the expressions on this 
doctrine are so         comprehensive and repeated that no doubt remains
 as to its         essential         elements. The references are to 
page and line in the record.
Dr.
         Clark's         definition of the incomprehensibility of God 
serves as an         appropriate         starting point. By this 
doctrine he means “that God knows every         proposition and that 
those propositions are infinite in number         and         that we 
shall not exhaust them when he reveals them to us one at         a      
   time” (27:19ff. Cf.         
  37:19ff.). The Scriptural statement that the ways of God are          
 past           finding out Dr. Clark would explain by saying “that no  
         endeavor on           our part can discover certain truths 
about God but those           truths can           be obtained only by 
revelations and we cannot solve them on           our own           
initiative . . .” (20:9ff.).
When
           this definition is analyzed with the help of the rest of his 
          testimony, it will appear that Dr. Clark denies that there is 
          any           qualitative distinction between the contents of 
the knowledge           of God           and the contents of the 
knowledge possible to man, but rather           in so           far as 
there is any distinction between these two the           distinction is 
          merely quantitative. The demonstration of this conclusion may 
          most           conveniently proceed by taking note of three 
stages in Dr.           Clark's           development of his views.
1.
 The fundamental assumption made           by Dr. Clark is that truth, 
whether           in the divine mind or in the human mind, is always    
       propositional. Truth, it is said, cannot be conceived of         
  except in terms of           propositions (Cf.
           2:9ff.; 11:2, 14f.; and especially 22:19ff.). It will be     
      observed           that Dr. Clark does not claim to derive this 
judgment from           Scripture;           it is rather regarded as an
 axiom of reason (Cf.           36:13-17; 19:19ff.).
It
           is not necessary or appropriate to consider here all of the  
         implications of this fundamental assumption. A few           
observations are,           however, of immediate importance. This view 
of truth, it will           be           noted, conceives of truth as 
fundamentally quantitative, as           consisting of a series of 
distinct items. Now even if it could           be           assumed that
 human knowledge has this propositional character,           it         
  would still involve a tremendous assumption to conclude that          
 the           divine knowledge must possess the same character. Since 
our           thinking           is pervasively conditioned by our 
creaturehood, we may not           safely           infer the character 
of our knowledge what must be true of the           knowledge of the 
Creator. Even if we could be sure that human           knowledge might 
be resolved into distinct propositions, it           would not          
 necessarily follow that the knowledge of God, who penetrates           
into the           depths of his own mind and of all things at a glance,
 would be           subject to the same qualification. And it may not be
           overlooked in           this connection that Dr. Clark does 
not claim Scriptural proof           for           his fundamental 
assumption as to the character of knowledge.
2.
 The far-reaching significance           of Dr. Clark's starting point, 
as           observed under 1. above, is evident when we note that Dr.  
         Clark holds           that man's knowledge of any proposition, 
if it is really           knowledge,           is identical with God's 
knowledge of the same proposition. If           knowledge is a matter of
 propositions divorced from the           knowing           subject, 
that is, of self-contained, independent statements, a           
proposition would have to have the same meaning for man as for          
 God. And since Dr. Clark holds that no limitation may be           
placed upon God's           power to reveal propositions one at a time 
to men, there is no           single           item of knowledge in 
God's mind which may not be shared by the           human           
mind.
That
           the above statement is a fair representation of Dr. Clark's  
         reasoning           is abundantly borne out by the record. See 
2:22ff.; 18:23f.;           20:22ff.; 28:14-17ff.; 32:25-33:4; 50:11-21;
 51:3-7. These           include           the following statements: 
“God can reveal any particular           proposition to man, and if God 
can make sons of Abraham out of           stones           on the 
roadway, he can make even a stupid person understand a           
proposition” (2:22ff.). “. . . if we don't know the object           
that           God knows, then we are in absolute ignorance” (28:16f.). 
In           answer           to the question, “You would say then, that
 all that is           revealed in           the Scripture is capable of
 being comprehended by the mind of           man?”,           Dr. Clark 
answered, “Oh yes, that is what it is given to us           for,        
   to understand it” (20:22ff.).
It
           would seem here that Dr. Clark is seeking to work out a 
theory           of           knowledge which, over against agnosticism 
and skepticism, will           assure           man of actual and 
certain knowledge. By appealing to the power           of           God 
reveal knowledge, and by resolving knowledge into detached           
items,           he argues that man may be assured of true knowledge 
since his           knowledge corresponds wholly with the divine 
knowledge of the           same           propositions.
While
           we appreciate the effort to arrive at certainty with 
reference           to           man's knowledge of God, in our judgment
 this is done at too           great a           cost. It is done at the
 sacrifice of the transcendence of           God's           knowledge. 
His thoughts are not our thoughts. His ways are           past          
 finding out. The secret things belong unto the Lord our God.           
If we           are not to bring the divine knowledge of his thoughts 
and ways           down           to human knowledge, or our human 
knowledge up to his divine           knowledge, we dare not maintain 
that his knowledge and our           knowledge         coincide at any single point.
 Our knowledge of any proposition           must always remain the 
knowledge of           the creature. As true knowledge, that knowledge 
must be           analogical           to the knowledge which God 
possesses, but it can never be           identified           with the 
knowledge which the infinite and absolute Creator           possesses   
        of the same proposition.
3.
 Finally, however, Dr. Clark           seems to reckon with the infinity
 of God           and thus also to hold to a certain conception of      
     incomprehensibility. The divine knowledge consists of an infinite           number           of propositions, and since man is
           a temporal creature, it will not be possible even in eternity
           to           reveal this infinite series of propositions to 
man (Cf.         34:5; 
52:15ff.). It is           illuminating that Dr. Clark does not base his
 doctrine of           incomprehensibility upon the distinction between 
God as           infinite and           man as finite (Cf.
           45:24f.), nor on the consideration that, if God were fully to
           reveal           himself to his creatures, the creatures 
would themselves have           to be           God (Cf.
           46:16ff.). It is based solely upon the judgment that man as a
           temporal being           cannot be conceived of as receiving 
an infinite number of           revelations. It is clear again that the 
approach of Dr. Clark           is           quantitative through and 
through. It is the number of the           propositions, rather than 
their content as such, not to speak           of the           
inscrutable mystery of the mind of God which is viewed as           
excluding           an exhaustive revelation of the divine mind.
Dr.
           Clark here, in a very restricted way, takes cognizance of    
       infinity in           connection with the divine knowledge but he
 seems to interpret           infinity in terms of mathematical 
definition rather than as a           theological distinction. He 
constantly appeals to the           arithmetical           series to 
illustrate the infinite (11:24ff.; 15:20ff.;           21:12ff.) and    
       even at one point denies that one may properly speak of “all”    
       of           the propositions in God's knowledge, since then they
 would not           be           “infinite”, appealing (in a remark 
unfortunately not included           in           the record) to the 
help which mathematics affords in this           connection           
(38:19ff.).
Now
           this view of infinity is altogether inadequate as applied to 
          the           knowledge of God. It is at best a quantitative 
category. And           if one           may not speak of “all” of the 
propositions constituting the           divine knowledge, it would 
suggest that infinity means that           which is           
unfinishable. If so, the self-sufficiency, the perfection of           
God, is           not maintained. (At other points, indeed, Dr. Clark 
seems to           be           employing a different conception of 
infinity, as when he           states that           the attributes are 
infinite as being “limited by nothing           outside of           
himself” (11:6).
It
           may be objected to the exposition of Dr. Clark's views       
    presented           above that it leaves out of account the 
important           consideration that           Dr. Clark allows that 
beyond the knowledge of a proposition           there is           the 
knowledge of the implications of a proposition, and that           the  
         knowledge which man may enjoy of a proposition does not        
   necessarily           carry with it a knowledge of its implications. 
This           qualification,           however, does not affect Dr. 
Clark's basic position in any           substantial way. The 
implications of propositions are after           all, on           his 
view, also propositions. Consequently, the inclusion of           such  
         propositions among the number of propositions that are thought 
          of as           constituting the divine knowledge does not 
require any           modification           of the judgment that the 
distinction between the divine           knowledge and           the 
knowledge possible to man is merely quantitative.
Another
           possible objection to the foregoing might take the form that 
          he does           not draw a qualitative distinction between 
the knowledge of           God and           the knowledge possible for 
men since he freely recognizes a           fundamental difference 
between the mode        
   of God's knowledge and that of man's knowledge. God's           
knowledge is           intuitive while man's is discursive (Cf.
           18:5f., 18ff.). Man is dependent upon God for his knowledge. 
          We           gladly concede this point, and have reckoned with
 it in what           has been           said above. However, this 
admission does not affect the whole           point           at issue 
here since the doctrine of the mode of the divine           knowledge   
        is not a part of the doctrine of the imcomprehensibility of     
      his           knowledge. The latter is concerned only with the 
contents of           the           divine knowledge. Dr. Clark 
distinguishes between the           knowledge of           God and of 
man so far as mode of knowledge is concerned, but           it is a     
      tragic fact that his dialectic has led him to obliterate the      
     qualitative distinction between the contents of the divine         
  mind and           the knowledge which is possible to the creature, 
and thus to           impinge           in a most serious fashion upon 
the transcendence of the divine           knowledge which is expressed 
by the doctrine of the           incomprehensibility of God.
We
           may also point that, even to the extent that Dr. Clark 
affirms           the           incomprehensibility of God, he does not 
do so in a manner that           provides solid assurance that it is a 
stable element in his           thought           about God. At the 
March, 1944, meeting of presbytery, Dr.           Clark was           
not even ready to say categorically that the number of           
propositions           in the divine knowledge was infinite. And in the 
July           examination,           he seems at times to have been far
 from sure of his position.           He           says, for example, 
that “it seems to me entirely           likely,
           though the exegesis is a littlee weak; but it seems to me    
       entirely           likely that there will always be certain 
particular truths           that we do           not know” (2:10ff.). 
Finally, if “in all probability there           will           be no 
end” to the increase of our knowledge of God in heaven           
(2:4ff.), and if it is only the infinite number
           of propositions in the divine knowledge which distinguishes 
it           from           the knowledge which man may receive, this 
distinction           approaches a           vanishing point.
We
           judge then that Dr. Clark's view of the incomprehensibility 
of           God,           as presented to the Presbytery of 
Philadelphia, is not a           proper one. And that he is in error 
seems to be due to the           fact that he does not           
approach the doctrine by way of an exegesis of Scripture. His           
approach, in the contrary, while admittedly taking into           
account           certain teachings of Scripture, is to a large extent  
         rationalistic. His argument is built up from certain           
principles derived from reason. One cannot expect a sound           
theology to proceed from a faulty method. In short, therefore,          
 we hold that both the formulation of this           doctrine and the 
method by which it is it is reached are out           of           
harmony with orthodox Presbyterianism.
II.
 If         the         first error concerns Dr. Clark's view of the 
relation of man's         knowledge to God's knowledge, there is a 
second error closely         related         to this one: namely, his 
view of the relation of the faculty, to         other faculties of the 
soul. Again here, Dr. Clark's statements         are         a highly 
unsatisfactory representation of the teaching of         Scripture      
   and of our subordinate standards, as well as of the great         
writings of         Reformed theology.
It
 may         be         objected immediately that this is not a problem 
in theology as         such,         but as a secondary problem of human
 psychology, of which the         Bible         and our standards have 
but little to say, and which cannot be         considered essential to 
orthodoxy or a Reformed position. At         least,         however, the
 problem is one of applied psychology, and         particularly         
one of psychology as applied to man's religious activity. Of         
that         subject, the Bible has a great deal to say, and the whole 
locus         of         Soteriology is deeply concerned with man's 
religious activity.         Of         that subject, the Bible has a 
great deal to say, and the whole         locus         of Soteriology is
 deeply concerned with man's reaction to God's         saving work. As 
can be seen in detail from the following         discussion,         the
 supposed psychological problem touches most pointedly on any         
number of highly essential theological questions.
Any
         statement of the relation between the intellectual and the 
other         spiritual faculties must needs be concerned with God as 
well as         with         man. Although comparatively little was said
 in the course of Dr.         Clark's examination to outline his 
position. Dr. Clark should         certainly not be accused of dividing 
the nature of God, or even         of         man into discrete parts 
which might be labeled “intellect”,         “emotion”, and “volition”, 
or by other terms. However, since         he is willing, at least for 
words as indicating different         faculties         there is 
certainly meaning in what has been said on the subject.
First
         of         all, Dr. Clark specifically states (p. 16) that the 
statement of         the         Westminster Confession that “God is 
without . . . passions”         means         that God is lacking in 
feeling and emotion. Although he objects         to a         definition
 of feeling or emotion which would make those words         mean        
 anything different from “passions”, he does not make provision         
for any other faculty in God's nature which would be         
non-intellectual         and non-volitional.
Secondly,
         to         round out the picture, Dr. Clark apparently does 
assume that God         has         both intellectual and volitional 
faculties, for he talks about         the         decretive and 
preceptive will of God, as well as about God's         knowledge.
As
 for         Dr.         Clark's views on human psychology and religious
 activity, the         evidence is much more complete. Again, Dr. Clark 
must not be         accused         of splitting up man's soul into 
sections, with one of which he         thinks, with another of which he 
wills, and so on. It would even         appear that Dr. Clark is 
reluctant to speak of distinct         faculties         (pp. 39-40), 
but he is willing to do so at least for the sake of         argument. 
Presumably his reluctance is in
           the interests of protecting the unity and integrity of the   
        human           soul, which is indeed a commendable motive. 
However, quite a           bit is           said about the relation 
between the various faculties or           activities           of the 
undivided human soul, which merits close study.
While
           Dr. Clark is “willing to admit [that] the intellect and      
     volition           and emotion are equally essential to a human 
being”, he           maintains           that “they have different 
functions” and “that the intellect           is           a supreme 
function” (p. 13).. The intellectual apprehension of           God      
     is man's “method of enjoying God forever and . . . the           
greatest           religious activity” (p. 13), and he equates the 
contemplation           of           God with glorifying and enjoying 
God (p. 14). Volitional           activity           on man's part is 
considered a means to the end of intellectual           contemplation 
(29:3-6; 39:15-24; 40:19-41:1; 42:6-10). Of all           the           
activities that are colloquially called “emotions”, love was           
the           only one prominently mentioned in the examination; Dr. 
Clark           considers love, in the theological sense, as volitional 
          (29:11-12). By exclusion, however, Dr. Clark denies any       
    important place in man's           religious activity to anything 
which is colloquially referred           to as           an “emotion”; 
at best, that would also be a means to the end           of           
contemplating God.
This
           statement of the “primacy” of the intellect carries with it  
         certain ideas about volition as such. The activity of the will 
          which           Dr. Clark subordinates to intellection seems 
to be little more           than           “a voluntary act of paying 
attention”, which results in an           intellectual apprehension 
(29:3-4). If it may be assumed that           outward acts are also the 
results of volitional activity, then           the           volitions 
that give rise to our obeying God's commands also           seem to     
      be of a low level, for glorification of God is said to include    
       “the         ordinary            act[s] of           obedience on a purely common
           plane such as “Thou shalt not steal” (32:1-4; italics added).
           In           any case, such volitions are held to be on a 
much lower level           than           intellectual contemplation of 
God.
Above
           all, however, Dr. Clark's statements about the primacy of the
           intellect in man's religious activity must be connected with 
          what he           says about “knowing” in other connections. 
To sum up in the           clearest available quotation what has been 
clearly stated           already,           Dr. Clark says, “The only 
kind of knowledge [with] which I am           familiar is the knowledge 
of the proposition; knowledge is the           possession of truth, and 
the only truth I know anything about           is a           
proposition” (22:18-21). The clear meaning of Dr. Clark is,           
then,           that man's highest religious activity is to have an     
      intellectual           apprehension of propositions contained in 
God's knowledge,           such as           “two plus two equals four”,
 or “God is love”. Dr. Clark           frankly says that he does not 
know what is meant by knowing           the love           of God 
(22:10-21); man's religious activity must be confined           to      
     knowing such things as the fact that God is love. This           
knowledge, to           be sure, is supposed to include volition and 
perhaps even           emotion,           but aside from merely paying 
attention in order to learn,           nothing is           said about 
any but the purely intellectual activity of           apprehending      
     propositions. In fact, it is perfectly clear, from the           
statements           that man's highest religious activity is 
intellectual and that           intellection means knowing propositions,
 that Dr. Clark           conceives of           man's religion as 
nothing greater than knowing propositions as           such. This 
knowing of propositions cannot, in the nature of           the case,    
       reflect or inspire any recognition by man of his relation to     
      God, for           the simple reason that the propositions have 
the same content,           mean           the same, to God and man. It 
would seem clear without going           any           farther that Dr. 
Clark has done one of two things: either he           has           
emasculated the words “emotion” and “volition” so that they           
imply almost none of the ideas that are customarily assigned           
to them           in colloquial usage, or he has ruled them out of the 
intellect           in           spite of his statements to the 
contrary. Dr. Clark deserves           the           highest 
commendation for his faithful opposition to any form           of       
    humanistic emotionalism in theology. However, when his           
position is           compared with the teachings of the Bible, the 
Westminster           Standards,           and also with the writings of
 Reformed theologians, it           unfortunately           begins to 
appear that he is in grave danger of falling into           the         
  equally serious error of humanistic intellectualism. No           
Calvinist           would for a moment deny the tremendous importance of
 knowledge           and of           the intellect; a Calvinist might 
even say that knowledge is           the first           requirement of 
such a religious activity as faith. However,           neither          
 the Bible nor the standards nor the theologians of the           
Reformed           tradition support such a view of the primacy of the 
intellect           as that           outlined above.
What,
           in the first place, is the Reformed teaching about the 
aspects           of           God's nature, or, if you will, the 
faculties which reside in           God? That God has knowledge and will
 is agreed by all. The           questions that           must concern 
us are two: Does God have what may properly be           called         
  “emotions”? and, what is the relation between God's faculties?
If           we assign to the word “emotion” an a priori
           definition which in the nature of the case identifies emotion
           with           “passions”, it would obviously be denying our 
standards to say           that God has emotions (Westminster Confession,             II, 1).
 God does not change; there is no shadow of           turning in him; he
 is not a man that he should repent; he is           immutable. 
Certainly, also, God does not share certain of the           qualities 
which we call “emotions”, such as fear, longing, and           surprise.
 If we are to speak of feelings or emotions in God at           all,    
       we must confine ourselves to his attributes which are           
sometimes           summed up under the word “benevolence”: love, 
goodness, mercy,           and grace. Even here, we must be careful to 
defend the           immutable           self-determination of God. But 
the question still remains, can           these           be identified 
with, or associated with, the idea of “emotion”           or           
“feeling”? Obviously, we define those words in their narrow           
but           perfectly good colloquial sense as something which arouses
 the           will           and thus determines action. In fine, is 
there any quality or           faculty           in God which is neither
 intellectual nor volitional, and which           underlies or 
accompanies volitional activity? That question,           in           
similar words, Dr. Clark studiously avoided answering (p. 16).
On           precisely the same subject, Charles Hodge makes a very clear           statement (Systematic theology,           vol. I, pp. 428-9):
“Love
           of necessity involves feeling, and if there be no feeling in 
          God,           there can be no love. That he produces 
happiness is no proof           of           love. The earth does that 
unconsciously and without design.           Men           often render 
others happy from vanity, from fear, or from           caprice. Unless 
the production of happiness can be referred,           not only to a    
       conscious intention, but too a purpose dictated by kind          
 feeling, it           is no proof of benevolence. And unless the 
children of God are           the           objects of his complacency 
and delight, they are not the           objects of           his love.”
Although
           love may, perhaps, be volitional, it must involve feeling or 
          emotion—not in the sense of passions, passivity, or change,   
        but           feeling in some sense akin to those which we have,
 which           determine           our will and action. It is 
necessary to deny external           determination           in God's 
pity, compassion, jealousy, hatred, love, and           “repentance”;   
        but it is difficult to see how internal determined feelings    
       can be           eliminated.
As
           to the relative prominence or functional level of the various
           faculties which God possesses, nothing in the Bible or in    
       Reformed           theology indicates that any one is to be set 
above the others.           The           Bible states with precisely 
the same absolute force that God           knows           the end from 
the beginning, that God is a jealous God, and           that God        
   imparts gifts as he wills. The Westminster Shorter Catechism         
  makes           no distinction when it says that God is infinite, 
eternal, and           unchangeable in his being and in all of his 
attributes. It may           seem           that Hodge, in the above 
quotation, subordinates volition to           emotion,           and 
that in the following quotation he subordinates intellect           to  
         volition:
“God
           knows himself by the necessity of his nature; but as         
  everything out           of himself depends for its existence or 
occurrence upon his           will, his           knowledge of each 
thing as an actual occurrence is suspended           on his           
will” (Systematic Theology,           vol. I, p. 397).
However,
           in each case Hodge is making no reference at all to a        
   difference of           functional level, but only to a logical order
 of economic           succession. Reformed theology seems to be barren 
of any           references to a primacy           of the intellect in 
God. In fact, every indication is that           whatever           
distinguishable faculties exist in God are equally prominent,           
equally           significant, and of equal functional level. God is “a 
personal           Spirit, infinite, eternal, and illimitable alike in 
His Being           and in           the intelligence, sensibility, and 
will which belong to Him as           a           personal Spirit” (B.B.
 Warfield: “God”, Studies in           Theology, p. 111).
As
           for human psychology and man's religious activity Dr. Clark's
           position again seems to be at serious variance with Biblical,
           confessional, and traditional statements. From the viewpoint 
          of           abstract psychology, it is perfectly true that 
Reformed           theologians           have not been in complete 
agreement as to the number and names           of the           
faculties of the human soul. In speaking specifically of the           
human           soul Calvin mentions by name only the intellect and will
 (Institutes,             Book I, Chap. XV, Sect. 6).
 Augustine refers to the perception, understanding,           and will. 
The           more recent theologians, however, seem to agree in large  
         measure on           the threefold distinction of intellect, 
emotion, and will           (Charles           Hodge, Systematic Theology,           vol. III, p. 35; A.A. Hodge, Outlines of Theology,           p. 217; Warfield, loc. cit.;           Abraham Kuyper, Dictaten Dogmatiek, Vol.           II, Locus de Homine,
           pp. 68-88). There would also seem to be considerable         
  disagreement on           the relations between the faculties: Calvin 
bluntly says that           “the           intellect rules the will” (loc. cit.),           while Bavinck (Gereforemeerde Dogmatiek, Vol.
           I, pp. 227ff.) seems now and then to think in terms of a     
      primacy of           the will. However, in both of these cases it 
soon becomes           clear that           the reference is not to 
functional levels; both Calvin and           Bavinck           insist on
 the total activity of the human being in religion,           with no   
        subordination of one faculty to another.
It
           is specifically in the sphere of religious activity, then,   
        that the           question of the relation of man's spiritual 
faculties to each           other           must be settled. The 
Christian, regenerated and effectually           called           by 
God's Spirit, is active in faith, in repentance, and in           
sanctification—though, of course, not exclusively nor intially          
 active. In each of these three activities, the clear           
statements of           the Reformed Faith are at variance with Dr. 
Clark's views of           intellection, as knowledge of propositions, 
being man's           highest           religious activity.
As
           for faith: The Westminster Confession, Chap. XIV, Section II,
           says,           “But the principle acts of saving faith are, 
accepting,           receiving,           and resting upon Christ alone .
 . .” This is in accord with           Biblical language which speaks of
 knowing Christ, receiving           him, and           hoping or 
trusting in him. That “accepting” Christ has to do           with 
intellectual activity, “receiving” him with emotional           activity
 in relating him to our personal cases, and “resting           upon”    
       him with volitional activity is the universal witness of         
  Reformed           theology. A.A. Hodge combines all three in the 
following           quotation           (Outlines of Theology,           pp. 353-4):
“The
           one indivisible soul knows and loves, desires and decides, 
and           these           several acts of the soul meet on the same 
object. The soul can           neither love, desire nor choose that 
which it does not know,           nor can           it know an object as
 true or good without some affection of           the will           
towards it. Assent to a purely speculative truth may be simply          
 an           act of understanding, but belief in a moral truth, in     
      testimony, in           promises, must be a complex act, embracing
 both the           understanding and           the will. The 
understanding apprehends the truth to be           believed, and        
   decides upon the validity of the evidence, but the disposition       
    to           believe testimony, or moral evidence, has its 
foundation in           the will. Actual trust in a promise is an act of
 the will, and           not a simple           judgment as to its 
trustworthiness.”
Compare
           this with Dr. Clark's statements that intellection is the    
       highest act           of man, and that intellection consists in 
knowing propositions           such           as “Two plus two equals 
four”.
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
An
             even             clearer statement of the equal function of
 man's various             faculties in             faith is given by 
Warfield (“On Faith in its Psychological             Aspects”, Studies in Theology,               pp. 337, 338-9, 340-341):
“The
               mode of the divine giving of faith . . . proceeds by the 
              divine               illumination of the understanding, 
softening of the heart,               and               quickening of 
the will [cf. Westminster
               Shorter Catechism, Q. 31]. . . . Man . . . is conscious 
of               his               dependence on God. . . . In unfallen 
man, the               consciousness of               dependence on God 
is far from a bare recognition of a               fact; it has a rich 
emotional result in the heart. This               emotional product of  
             course includes fear, in the sense of awe and reverence.   
            But its               peculiar quality is just active and 
loving trust. Sinless               man               delights to be 
dependent on God and trusts Him wholly. . .               . In this     
          spontaneous trust of sinless man we have faith at its         
      purest . . .
“In
               accordance with the nature of this faith the Protestant  
             theologians               have generally explained that 
faith includes in itself the               three               elements 
of notitia, assensus, fiducia.
 Their primary object has               been, no doubt, to protest 
against the               Romish conception which limits faith to the 
assent of the               understanding. [!] The stress of the 
Protestant definition               lies               therefore upon 
the fiducial element. This stress has not               led             
  Protestant theologians generally, however, to eliminate               
from the               conception of faith the elements of understanding
 and               assent. . . . In every movement of faith, therefore, 
from               the lowest to the               highest, there is an 
intellectual, an emotional, and a               voluntary               
element, though naturally these elements vary in their               
relative               prominence in the several movements of faith. . .
 .
The
               central movement in all faith is no doubt the element of 
              assent. . .               . But the movement of assent 
must depend, as it always               does depend,               on a 
movement, not specifically of the will, but of the               
intellect;               the assensus issues               from the notitia.
 The               movement of the sensibilities which we call 'trust', 
is on               the               contrary the product of assent. 
And it is in this movement               of the               
sensibilities that faith fulfills itself, and it is by it               
that, as               specifically 'faith', it is 'formed'”.
As
             for repentance: The Shorter Catechism could not be more    
         clear in             regard to the three aspects of man's soul 
being active in             repentance             (Q. 87):
         “Repentance
 unto life is a saving grace,             whereby a             sinner, 
out of a true sense of his sin, and apprehension of             the 
mercy             of God in Christ, doth, with grief and hatred of his 
sin,             turn from             it unto God, with full purpose 
of, and endeavor after, new             obedience.”
If
             a sense of sin and apprehension of God's mercy are not     
        intellectual,             if grief and hatred are not emotional,
 and if turning with             purpose             and endeavor is not
 volitional, then words do not mean             anything; and           
  these are all equally “high” aspects of this particularly             
religious activity of men. 2 Corinthians 7:8-11
 includes             precisely             the same elements: the 
knowledge of sin instilled by Paul's             first             
epistle, godly sorrow for sin (accompanied by indignation,             
fear,             longing, and zeal) and an earnest care which 
manifested             itself in             clearing themselves and 
avenging the wrong done. Again,             there are             three 
equally important and lofty functions in repentance:             
intellectual, emotional, and volitional.
As
             for sanctification: “we are renewed in the whole man after 
            the             image of God” (Shorter Catechism, Q. 35). 
Sanctification is,             in a             sense, continual or 
repeated repentance, so far as man's             activity in            
 it is concerned. Accordingly, all that has been said about             
repentance applies here with equal force. There is an             
important             additional point, however, and that has to do with
 the             specific words             that we are “renewed in the 
whole man after the image of             God”. That very work was begun 
and, in it essential form,             accomplished in             
regeneration. In regeneration the original moral image of             
God,             consisting of knowledge, righteousness, and holiness, 
was             restored to             us. Sanctification is a 
continual progress toward that image             in our             
outwards lives. But if that process includes intellect,             
emotion, and             will, then surely we would expect to find all 
three of those             aspects             in the image of God in 
man. The conclusion is justified: we             find             
precisely that in Biblical language and in Reformed             
theology. Just             as God has those three faculties, so man, 
created in God's             image, has             them. Man is 
intellectually created in God's image,             emotionally          
   created in God's image, volitionally created in God's image.
A
             recollection of Dr. Clark's forthright denial of anything  
           that might             be “emotion” in God, cited above, will
 thus impress us that             he             not only does violence 
to the Scriptural and Reformed             doctrine of             man's
 religious life, but also to the tremendously important             
doctrine             of God's creation of man in his own image. To 
defend the             doctrine of             God, to defend the 
doctrine of creation, to defend the             doctrines of            
 salvation, we must protest against any sympathy toward this            
 idea of             the “primacy” of the intellect.
As
               for man's religious activity in a more general way,      
         Reformed Theology               is equally vigorous in 
upholding the equal importance of               all man's               
faculties. The Westminster Shorter                 Catechism
 tells us that “man's chief end is to               glorify             
  God and to enjoy him forever”; we are to learn how to do              
 this from               the Bible alone, and the Bible teaches “what 
man is to               believe               concerning God and what 
duty God requires of man” (Qs.               1-3). Obviously duty, which
 is volitional if anything, is               placed side by             
  side with knowledge, and that duty is “obedience to his               
revealed               will” (Q. 39), again a matter of volition. The 
sum of that               obedience is love. (Q. 42), which just might 
be an               emotion; and even               if it is not an 
emotion, we are to love God with our               heart, which is      
         the best Scriptural indication of emotion.
Calvin,
               who so clearly gives the intellect a control over will,  
             though not by               virtue of that a primacy over 
will, speaks along the same               line               (Institutes, Bk. I,               Ch. II):
“Properly               speaking, we cannot say that God is known where there is
               no religion or piety. . . . By piety I mean that union of
               reverence               and love to God which the 
knowledge of his benefits               inspires. For               
until men feel that they owe everything to God, that they               
are               cherished by his paternal care, and that he is the 
author               of all               their blessings, so that 
nought is to be looked for away               from him,               
they will never submit to him in voluntary obedience; nay,              
 unless               they place their entire happiness in him, they 
will never               yield up               their whole selves to 
him in truth and sincerity.
“The               effect of our knowledge rather ought to be, first,               to teach us reverence and fear; and secondly,
               to induce us, under its guidance and teaching, to ask    
           every good               thing from him, and, when it is 
received, ascribe it to               him. For how               can the
 idea of God enter your mind without instantly               giving rise
 to               the thought, that since you are his workmanship, you 
are               bound, by               the very law of creation, to 
submit to his authority?—that               your               life is 
due to him?—that whatever you do ought to have               reference 
to               him? If so, it undoubtedly follows that your life is 
sadly               corrupted, it it is not framed in obedience to him, 
since               his will               ought to be the law of our 
lives. On the other hand, your               idea of               his 
nature is not clear unless you acknowledge him to be               the 
origin               and fount of all goodness. Hence would arise both  
             confidence in him,               and a desire of cleaving 
to him, did not the depravity of               the human               
mind lead it away from the proper course of investigation.              
 . . . He               by whom God is thus known, perceiving how he 
governs all               things,               confides in him as his 
guardian and protector, and casts               himself               
entirely upon his faithfulness,—perceiving him to be the               
source of               every blessing, if he is in any strait or feels 
any want,               he               instantly recurs to his 
protection and trusts to his               aid,—persuaded               
that he is good and merciful, he reclines upon him with               
sure               confidence . . . —acknowledging him as his Father and
 his               Lord, he               considers himself bound to 
have respect to his authority               in all               things,
 to reverence his majesty, aim at the advancement               of his  
             glory, and obey his commands,—regarding him as a just      
         judge . . . ,               he keeps the judgment seat always 
in his view. . . .
“Such               is pure and and genuine religion, namely, confidence               in God               coupled with serious fear.”
Pure
             and genuine religion is not, then, merely intellectual     
        apprehension             of propositional truths.        
So               also Bavinck (Gereformeerde Dogmatiek,               Vol. I, pp. 276-277):
“The
               result is, therefore, that religion is not limited to but
               one of               man's faculties, but pervades the 
whole man. The               relationship to God               is a 
total and central relationship. We must love God with               all 
our               mind and with all our soul and with all our strength. 
              Precisely               because God is God he claims us 
completely in body and               soul, with all               our 
faculties and in all our relations. To be sure, there               is 
also               order in this relationship of man to God. Here also 
each               faculty               exists and works in man 
according to its own nature.               Knowledge is               
first; there is no true service of God without true               
knowledge: ignoti nulla cupido,
               Unknown is unloved. He who goes to God must believe that 
              he is the               rewarder of them that seek him: Hebrews 11:6. Belief               cometh from               hearing: Romans 10:13, 14.
 The heathen came to ungodliness               and               
unrighteousness, because they did not retain God in their               
knowledge: Romans 1:18f.
 But the knowledge of God works               itself out in the heart   
            and awakens there all sorts of emotions of fear and hope,   
            despair and               joy, guilt and forgiveness, misery
 and release, as the               whole               Scripture 
witnesses, particularly in the Psalms. And               through the    
           heart it works in turn on the will; faith reveals itself     
          in love, in               works: James 1:27, 1 John 1:5-7; Romans 2:10-13; Galatians               5:6,
 1               Corinthians 13:1f, etc. Head, heart and hand work 
together,               each in its               own way, taken captive
 by religion; religion takes the               whole man,               
body and soul, into her service.”
Cf.               also Deuteronomy. 29:29:
 “the things that are revealed               belong unto               
us and to our children, that we man do all the works of               
this law”.
“The
               knowledge of God, which is set before us in the          
     Scriptures, is               designed for the same purpose as that 
which shines in               creation, viz.,               that we may 
thereby learn to worship him with perfect               integrity and   
            unfeigned obedience, and also to depend entirely on his     
          goodness” (Calvin, Institutes,               Bk. I, Ch. X, Sect. 2).
It
               may be said, indeed, that the whole glorious climax of 
the               covenant               relationship which is so 
essential a part of the Reformed               Faith is,               
as witnessed by Scripture, our standards, and Reformed               
writers,             obedience
 to               God. This is still no “primacy” of the will or of any 
              other faculty;               it is simply an eminently 
Reformed statement of the nature               of the               
Christian's religious activity. It certainly goes far               
beyond an               exaltation of the apprehension of propositions.
It
               may be noted that the discussion so far has assumed      
         throughout that               the religious man in question is a
 Christian, regenerated               by God. The assumption has 
constantly been that the               unregenerate man is              
 polluted in every thought, every emotion, and every act of             
  his will. Precisely here must be raised a final objection             
  to Dr. Clark's view               of the primacy of the intellect. Dr.
 Clark does not deny               the               necessity or the 
fact of regeneration but he makes no               absolute             
  qualitative distinction between the knowledge of the               
unregenerate man               and the knowledge of the regenerate man. 
With the same               ease, the               same “common sense”,
 the unregenerate and the regenerate               man can              
 understand propositions revealed to man (p. 20; 28:13-16;              
 31:13-17;               34:13-35:2).
The
               result is simply this, that all men have a certain amount
               of               religious activity, some more and some 
less, some with               more falsehood               mixed in and 
some with less, but all with some; there is               not one       
        shred of evidence that man's religious activity undergoes       
        any               qualitative change through regeneration. That 
bears all               the earmarks               of rationalism, 
humanistic intellectualism. It seems to               share the         
      very same vicious independence from God that obtains in           
    the               voluntarism and emotionalism to which Dr. Clark is
 so               unalterably               opposed.
To
               sum up briefly a few of the conclusions of this section, 
              Dr. Clark's               view of the primacy of the 
intellect is at serious               variance with               
Scripture, with our standards, and with recognized               
Reformed writings,               not only in the general concept of 
human psychology or of               man's               religious 
activity, but specifically in the doctrine of               God's       
        spiritual nature, in the doctrine of the image of God in        
       man, in the               doctrine of man's spiritual nature, in 
the doctrines of               faith,               repentance, and 
sanctification, in the doctrine of the               covenant, in       
        the doctrine of sin, particularly as regards its noetic         
      effects, and               in all the ethical implications of 
these doctrines. The               variance is               no minor 
matter; it is the product of a rationalistic               dialectic. 
The               approval or overlooking of such a variance is a matter
 of               the utmost               gravity.
III.
         Dr.         Clark Asserts that the relationship of divine 
sovereignty and         human         responsibility to each other 
presents no difficulty for his         thinking         and that the two
 are easily reconcilable before the bar of human         reason. He 
expresses surprise that so many theologians find an         insuperable 
difficulty here. In his second examination little         was         
said on this matter (3:11-4:7; 47:13-16), but in the first         
examination it received considerable attention. Reference was         
then         made to Dr. Clark's article “Determinism and 
Responsibility”,         which appeared in the January 15, 1932, issue 
of The           Evangelical           Quarterly.
 In that           article he           said that it had been stated by 
his denomination—at that time           The           Presbyterian 
Church in the U.S.A.—“that the reconciliation of           man's free 
agency and God's sovereignty is an inscrutable           mystery”,      
     but he added: “Rather the mystery is—recognizing that God is       
    the           ultimate cause of man's nature—how the Calvinistic 
solution           could           have been so long overlooked” (p. 
16). In the first           examination he           made the remark 
that the Stoics had already solved this           problem.
It
           needs hardly to be said that “the lazy man's argument” does  
         not           hold. In other words, the fact that God 
foreordained from all           that           comes to pass in time, 
and in his providence brings it to pass           without fail, does not
 deprive man of freedom and thus absolve           him           from 
all responsibility. To say that it does is to destroy the           
problem. An obvious truth, on which all Reformed theologians           
are           agreed, is that the exercise of human freedom is itself   
        included in           the divine decree of foreordination; in a 
word, that this           decree           embraces means as well as 
ends. There is also perfect           agreement           among Reformed
 theologians on the presupposition that human           responsibility 
is a corollary of divine sovereignty; that is,           that           
man is responsible to God because God is sovereign. Again, not          
 one           Reformed theologian teaches that divine sovereignty and 
human           responsibility are actually contradictory. However      
     contradictory           they may seem to the finite and 
sin-darkened minds of men,           both are           taught 
unmistakably in Holy Writ, and this must mean that for           the    
       mind of God they are perfectly harmonious.
Nevertheless
           Reformed theologians readily grant that there are 
difficulties           here           which they are unable to solve. L.
 Berkhof has stated           succinctly one           aspect of the 
problem. Speaking of the fact that God not only           planned all 
events from eternity but also brings them to pass           by his      
     providence, he says:
Pelagians,
           Semi-Pelagians, and Arminians raise a serious objection to   
        this           doctrine of providence. They maintain that a 
previous           concurrence,           which is not merely general 
but predetermines man           to           specific actions,
 makes           God the           responsible author of sin. Reformed 
theologians are well aware           of           the difficulty that 
presents itself here, but do not feel free           to           
circumvent it by denying God's absolute control over the free           
actions           of His moral creatures, since this is clearly taught 
in           Scripture           (Systematic Theology,           Second Revised and Enlarged Edition, 1941, p. 174).
Berkhof
           admits the difficulty, but, instead of seeking to solve it, 
is           content to abide by the plain teaching of Scripture. The   
        greatest           Reformed theologians have always done 
likewise.
After           setting forth the doctrine of reprobation Paul says in Romans           9:19,
           “Thou wilt say then unto me, why doth he yet find fault? The 
          point           of this objection to the apostolic teaching is
 that divine           sovereignty as manifested in reprobation leaves 
no room for           human           responsibility. Paul's answer 
begins: “Nay but, O man, who art           thou that repliest against 
God?” (Romans 9:20). Calvin           comments:
In
           this first answer he does nothing else but beat down impious 
          blasphemy by an argument taken from the condition of man: he  
         will           presently subjoin another by which he will clear
 the           righteousness of           God from all blame.
He           proceeds:
But
           they who say that Paul, wanting reason, had recourse to      
     reproof, cast           a grievous calumny on the Holy Spirit: for 
the things           calculated to           vindicate God's justice, 
and ready at hand, he was at first           unwilling           to 
adduce, for they could not have been comprehended; yea, he           so 
          modifies his second reason, that he does not undertake a full 
          defense, but in such a manner as to give a sufficient         
  demonstration           of God's justice, if it be considered by us 
with devout           humility and           reverence.
And           then Calvin says:
He
           reminds man of what is especially meet for him to remember,  
         that is,           of his own condition; as though he had 
said,—“Since thou art           man,           thou ownest thyself to be
 dust and ashes; why then dost thou           contend           with the
 Lord about that which thou art not able to           understand?” In a 
word, the Apostle did not bring forward what           might have been  
         said, but what is suitable to our ignorance. Proud men         
  clamour,           because Paul, admitting that men are rejected or 
chosen by the           secret           counsel of God, alleges no 
cause; as though the Spirit of God           were           silent for 
want of reason, and not rather, that by his silence           he        
   reminds us, that a mystery which our minds cannot comprehend         
  ought to           be reverently adored, and that he thus checks the 
wantonness           of human           curiosity. Let uss then know, 
that God does for no other           reason           refrain from 
speaking, but that he sees that we cannot contain           his         
  immense wisdom in our small measure; and thus regarding our           
weakness,           he leads us to moderation and sobriety.
It
           is evident that Paul, instead of seeking to reconcile divine 
          sovereignty and human responsibility by means of human logic, 
          silences those who regard them as contradictory by a strong   
        assertion           of divine sovereignty. It is equally clear 
that Calvin follows           faithfully in the apostle's footsteps.
In           perfect harmony with his comment on Romans 9:19, 20 is           Calvin's           comment on the rhetorical question of Romans 11:34, “Who has           known           the mind of the Lord?” Says Calvin:
If
           anyone will seek to know more than what God has revealed, he 
          shall be           overwhelmed with the immeasurable 
brightness of inaccessible           light. But we must bear in mind the
 distinction, which I have           before           mentioned, between
 the secret counsel of God, and his will           made known           
in Scripture; for though the whole doctrine of Scripture           
surpasses in           its height the mind of man, yet an access to it 
is not closed           against           the faithful, who reverently 
and soberly follow the Spirit as           their           guide; but 
the cause is different with regard to his hidden           counsel,     
      the depth and height of which cannot by any investigation be      
     reached.
In           his Gereformeerde Dogmatiek           part I, p. 115, Geerhardus Vos compares the teaching of Romans           9:1-29           with that of Romans 9:30-10:21. He says:
For
           the apostle both are certain: the free, sovereign counsel of 
          God,           which does not derive its motives from the 
works of man, and           the full           responsibility of man to 
his Creator. He discusses both in           order. An attempt to 
reconcile the two logically with each           other the apostle       
    has not made. And we too may make no such attempt. But it is        
   much           more reprehensible still so to pervert and distort the
 content           of           Romans 9:1-29
 as to fit it somehow into what follows. Both           sides           
must stand next to each other, unreconciled for our thinking,           
but           each in its full right. To wish to explain Romans 9 from  
         Romans 10           is rationalistic exegesis.
In           his Outlines of Theology,
           pp. 221f., A. A. Hodge considers the contention that the     
      Reformed           doctrine of predestination is inconsistent with
 the liberty           and           accountability of man. He says:
Paul
           answers this objection by condescending to no appeal to human
           reason,           but simply (1) by asserting God's 
sovereignty as Creator, and           man's           dependence as 
creature, and (2) by asserting the just exposure           of all       
    men alike to wrath as sinners.
The           reference is to Romans 9:20-24. Elsewhere he says:
We
           have the fact distinctly revealed that God has decreed the   
        free acts           of men, and yet that the actors were none 
the less           responsible, and           consequently none the less
 free in their acts.—Acts 2:23;           3:18;           4:27, 28; Genesis 50:20, etc. We never can understand how
           the infinite God acts upon the finite spirit of man, but it 
is           none           the less our duty to believe (p. 210).
Abraham           Kuyper comments in his Dictaten Dogmatiek, Locus de           Deo,           part 3, p. 108, on Matthew 26:24,
 “The Son of man goeth as it           is           written of him: but 
woe unto that man by whom the Son of man           is           
betrayed: it had been good for that man if he had not been           
born”. Says this outspoken supralapsarian:
Jesus           says three things here: (1) this crime with reference to me must           be committed, (2) he who is to commit this crime will suffer           eternal         condemnation,           (3) to           prevent that he should not have been born and he was born according to           the decree. However man           may talk, the fact that this culminating sin was           included in           the decree
 is not only           taught           definitely in Holy Scripture by 
apostles and prophets, but by           the           Lord Jesus 
himself, while he who commits this sin, far           from           being innocent, is punished with everlasting damnation.
 After these two have been placed           alongside each other, the 
Lord           Jesus ventures no attempt at solution; on the contrary, 
he           confronts           his disciples still more pointedly with
 the impenetrability of           the           mystery by saying: “It 
had been good for that man if he had           not           been born.”
Here
         then is a situation which is inadequately described as amazing.
         There is a problem which has baffled the greatest theologians 
of         history. Not even Holy Scripture offers a solution. But Dr.  
       Clark         asserts unblushingly that for his thinking the 
problem has         ceased         being a problem. Here is something 
phenomenal. What accounts for         it? The most charitable, and no 
doubt the correct, explanation         is         that Dr. Clark has 
come under the spell of rationalism. It is         difficult indeed to 
escape the conclusion that by his refusal to         permit the 
scriptural teaching of divine sovereignty and the         scriptural 
teaching of human responsibility to stand alongside         each        
 other and by his claim that he has fully reconciled them with         
each         other before the bar of human reason Dr. Clark has fallen 
into         the         error of rationalism. To be sure, he is not a 
rationalist in the         sense that he substitutes human reason for 
divine revelation as         such. But, to say nothing of his finding 
the solution of the         problem of         the relation to each 
other of divine sovereignty and human         responsibility in the 
teaching of pagan philosophers who were         totally         ignorant
 of the teaching of Holy Writ on either of these         subjects, it   
      is clear that Dr. Clark regards Scripture from the viewpoint of   
      a         system which to the mind of man must be harmonious in 
all its         parts. The inevitable outcome is rationalism in the     
    interpretation of         Scripture. And that too is rationalism. 
Although Dr. Clark does         not         claim actually to possess at
 the present moment the solution of         every         Scriptural 
paradox, yet his rationalism leaves room at best for         only       
  a temporary subjection of human reason to the divine Word.
The
         history of doctrine tells us that the view under discussion is 
        far         from innocent. The tenet that divine sovereignty and
 human         responsibility are logically reconcilable has been held 
by two         schools of thought, both of which claimed to be Reformed 
but         neither         of which was recognized as Reformed by the 
Reformed churches.         One of         these schools is Arminianism. 
It meant to uphold both divine         sovereignty and human 
responsibility, especially the latter, but         in         its 
rationalistic attempt to harmonize the two it did great         violence
         to the former. The other school is Antinomianism. It also meant
         to         uphold both divine sovereignty and human 
responsibility,         especially         the former, but in its 
rationalistic attempt to harmonize the         two it         did great 
violence to the latter. Dr. Abraham Kuyper has         described        
 Antinomianism as “dreadful sin which occurs almost exclusively         
in         the Reformed churches”. He says that what accounts for this  
       phenomenon is a one-sided emphasis in much Reformed preaching on 
        God's decretive will at the expense of his preceptive will. He  
       deems         it essential to hold that Scripture dinstinguishes 
between the         sphere         of divine sovereignty and the sphere 
of human responsibility and         “that this dinstinction is so 
absolute that one can never pass         from         the one into the 
other” (Dictaten Dogmatiek, Locus de Deo,
           part 3, pp. 113f.). In light of history we cannot but hold   
        that his           rationalism exposes Dr. Clark to the peril of
 Antinomianism.
Here
           attention must be called to his treatment of human           
responsibility in           the article “Determinism and 
Responsibility”. Reformed           theologians generally are 
exceedingly circumspect when they           discuss           the 
relation of the divine decree and divine providence to the           sin
 of           man. There is excellent reason for their carefulness. They
 are           zealous to maintain God's holiness as well as his 
sovereignty,           and           they are just as zealous, while 
upholding divine sovereignty,           not to           detract, after 
the manner of the Antinomians, from human           responsibility. But 
Dr. Clark says boldy: “Does the view here           proposed make God 
the Author of sin? Why the learned divines           who           
formulated the various creeds so uniformly permitted such a           
metaphorical expression to becloud the issue is a puzzle. This          
 view           most certainly makes God the First and Ultimate Cause of
           everything. But very slight reflection on the definition of  
         responsibility and           its implication of a superior 
authority shows that God is not           responsible for sin” (p. 22). 
It It is meaningful that Dr.           Clark           is not careful to
 say, as so many Reformed theologians are,           that God           
is not the efficient cause of sin (e.g. Berkhof, Systematic           Theology, p. 108.
Dr. Clark adds significantly:      
It
 follows from this that determinism is consistent         with         
responsibility and the concept of freedom which was introduced         
only         to guarantee responsibility is useless. Of course man is 
still a         “free agent” for that merely means, as Hodge says, that 
man has         the power to make a decision. It is difficult to 
understand         then,         why so much effort should be wasted in 
the attempt to make the         power         of deciding consistent 
with the certainty of deciding. If there         be         any mystery 
about it, as the Brief Statement says, it is one of         the         
theologian's own choosing. For God both gives the power and         
determines how it shall be used. God is Sovereign (p. 22).      
To
           sever human responsibility from human freedom, as is here    
       done, is a           serious departure from generally accepted 
Reformed theology.           Charles           Hodge says that a truth 
“of which every man is convinced from           the           very 
constitution of his nature” is “that none but free agents           can 
be accountable for their character or conduct” (Systematic           Theology,
 vol. II, p.           293). He           contends further that the 
Bible teaches “that man is a free           and           responsible 
agent, because he is the author of his own acts,           and          
 because he is determined to act by nothing out of himself” (p.         
  307). But Dr. Clark contends without qualification that God           
both           gives the power of deciding “and determines how it shall 
be           used”. The Westminster Confession of Faith also links 
together           human           liberty and human responsibility when
 it says “God from           eternity           did by the most wise and
 holy counsel of his own will, freely           and           
unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass: yet so as           
thereby           neither is God the author of sin, nor is violence 
offered to           the will           of the creatures, nor is the 
liberty or contingency of second           causes           taken away, 
but rather established” (III,             I).
 To be sure, the term “responsibility” is not           employed        
   here, as is the term “liberty”, but in the statement that God        
   is           not the author of sin it is plainly implied that man is 
the           author of           sin and hence responsible for it.
We
 conclude, in spite of Dr. Clark's professed         adherence         
to chapter III, section I, of the Confession (3:11-19), that his        
 rationalism has resulted in his departing from the historic         
Reformed         doctrine of human responsibility. In his attempt to 
reconcile by         human reason divine sovereignty and human 
responsibility he has         done         decided violence to the 
latter.
IV.
 In the course of Dr. Clark's examination by         Presbytery it 
became abundantly clear that his rationalism keeps         him         
from doing justice to the precious teaching of Scripture that in        
 the         gospel God sincerely offers salvation in Christ to all who 
hear,         reprobate as well as elect, and that he has no pleasure in
 any         one's         rejecting this offer but, contrariwise, would
 have all who hear         accept it and be saved.
Dr.
           Clark constantly speaks of the gospel as a command. That it 
is           a           command permits of no doubt. But only 
reluctantly does he           admit that           the gospel is also an
 offer and an invitation (8:9, 10;           23:5-24;           
48:21-25). This is strange, to say the least. The Westminster           
Confession of Faith (VII, III) say that in the covenant of           
grace God           “freely offereth
           unto sinners life and salvation by Jesus Christ”. And the    
       Shorter           Catechism (Q. 86) defines faith in Jesus Christ
 as “a saving           grace,           whereby we receive and rest 
upon him alone for salvation, as           he is         offered to us in           the           gospel”.
Dr.           Clark stedfastly refuses to describe as sincere           the offer which God makes to sinners in the gospel (e.g.,
           7:8-15; 10:10-18; 24:3f.). This is surpassing strange. To be 
          sure,           the Westminster standards do not employ the 
word sincere           
in this connection; but is it not a foregone conclusion that           
the           offer is sincere? Would it not be blasphemy to deny this? 
For           that           very reason there was no need of the 
Westminster divines'           describing           the gospel offer as 
sincere. Its sincerity goes without           saying. But           
obviously that is not Dr. Clark's reason for refusing to           
characterize           it as sincere.
When
 the Arminian controversy was at its height the         Reformed 
churches faced a different situation. It was contended         
emphatically by the Arminians that the Reformed doctrine of         
reprobation rules out the sincerity of God's offer of salvation         
to         the reprobate and that, consequently, the Reformed faith has a
         gospel         only for the elect. Precisely the sincerity of 
the gospel offer         was         now at issue. And so we find the 
Synod of Dort, which was         summoned         to deal with the 
Arminian heresy and which consisted of         representatives of the 
Reformed churches of almost all of         Europe,         declaring 
unmistakably and emphatically:
As
 many as are           called           by the gospel are unfeignedly 
called. For God hath most           earnestly           and truly 
declared in his Word what will be acceptable to him;           namely, 
that all who are called should comply with the           invitation     
      (Third and             Fourth             Heads of Doctrine, art. 8).
In
         the course of his examination Dr. Clark did indeed express     
    agreement         with this teaching of Dort (24:5-20), but he made 
it clear in         doing         so he conceived of the gospel as a 
command (48:24-49:9. See also         8:9f.). He said that it is the 
preceptive will of God that those         who         hear shall believe
 the gospel, and it is “acceptable” to God         that         they do 
so because he insists on being obeyed. But the Synod of         Dort    
     obviously  meant much     
      more           than that when it employed the word “acceptable”. 
That appears           from its description of the gospel as an 
invitation, from its           insistence that all who are called are 
called “unfeignedly”,           as           well as from the fact that 
it was refuting the Arminian           contention           that the 
Reformed faith leaves no room for a sincere offer of           salvation
 made by God to the reprobate. What the authors of           the        
   Canons had in mind was that God has “no pleasure in the death        
   of           the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and 
live”           (Ezekiel 33:11).
In
 this connection reference must again be made to         Dr.         
Clark's view that God has no emotions. If this definition of         
emotions be granted, God certainly has none. But at this point         
in         the examination it appeared that Dr. Clark regards God as 
being         without feelings of any kind. He denied emphatically that 
        Ezekiel         33:11
 and the statement in the Canons of Dort which was just         
discussed can have any reference to emotions in God, for God has        
 no         emotions (49:15-50:1). See also 29:11f.). Clearly Dr. Clark 
is         consistent here in his rationalism.
The
 reason for Dr. Clark's failure to do justice to         the         
aspect of the gospel under discussion is apparent. He         
believes—as         do we all—the doctrine of reprobation. But he cannot
 allow of         any         conception of the gospel which to his 
thinking might do the         slightest         violence to this 
doctrine. Thus he is compelled to bring his         view of         the 
gospel into harmony with this doctrine. Having done that, he         can
         say, as he does, that he sees no logical conflict whatever     
    between         the gospel and reprobation. In a word, his 
rationalism does not         permit him to let the two stand 
unreconciled alongside each         other. Rather than do that he would 
modify the gospel in the         interest of         reprobation. 
Otherwise expressed, he makes the same error as         does         the
 Arminian, although he moves in the opposite direction. The         
Arminian cannot harmonize the divine reprobation with the         
sincere         divine offer of salvation to all who hear; hence he 
rejects the         former. Neither can Dr. Clark harmonize the two, and
 so he         detracts         from the latter. Rationalism accounts 
for both errors.
It
 is not difficult to show that both Calvin and         the         
outstanding Reformed theologians of recent times stressed, on         
the         basis of Holy Scripture, which is the primary standard of 
The         Orthodox Presbyterian Church, the sincerity of the divine 
offer         of         salvation in the case of all to whom it comes, 
the reprobate as         well         as the elect, even though these 
theologians confessed to their         inability to harmonize this view 
of the gospel with the         scriptural         teaching of 
reprobation.
Ezekiel 18:23 reads:
Have
 I any pleasure at all that the wicked should         die?         saith
 the Lord God?; and not that he should return from his         ways, and
         live?
Calvin comments:
God
 desires           nothing           more earnestly than that those who 
were perishing and rushing           to           destruction should 
return into the way of safety. And for this           reason not only is
 the Gospel spread abroad in the world, but           God           
wished to bear witness through all ages how inclined he is to           
pity .           . . What the prophet now says is very true, that God 
wills not           the           death of a sinner, because he meets 
him of his own accord, and           is not           only prepared to 
receive all who fly to his pity, but he calls           them           
towards him with a loud voice, when sees how they are           
alienated from           all hope of safety . . . If one again 
objects—this is making           God           act with duplicity, the 
answer is ready, that God always
           wishes the same thing, though by different ways, and in a    
       manner           inscrutable to us. Although, therefore, God's 
will is simple,           yet           great variety is involved in it,
 so far as our senses are           concerned. Besides, it is not 
surprising that our eyes should           be blinded by           
intense light, so that we cannot certainly judge how God           
wishes all           to be saved, and yet has devoted all the reprobate 
to eternal           destruction, and wishes them to perish.
In 1 Peter 3:9 it is said that the Lord is “not         willing than any should perish, but that all should come to         repentance”.
Says Calvin:
So
 wonderful is his love towards mankind, that he         would         
have them all to be saved, and is of his own self prepared to         
bestow         salvation on the lost . . . But it may be asked, If God 
wishes         none         to perish, why is it that so many do perish?
 To this my answer         is,         that no mention is here made of 
the hidden purpose of God,         according         to which the 
reprobate are doomed to their own ruin, but only of         his         
will as made known to us in the gospel. For God there stretches         
forth his hand without a difference to all, but lays hold only         
of         those, to lead them to himself, whom he has chosen before the
         foundation of the world”.
In Matthew 23:37 Christ, addressing Jerusalem, says
How
 often would I have gathered thy children         together,         even
 as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye         would  
       not!
Calvin remarks:
We now perceive the reason why Christ, speaking in         the         person of God, compares himself to a hen
 . . . By this         he         means that, whenever the Word of God 
is exhibited to us, he         opens his         bosom to us with 
maternal kindness, and, not satisfied with         this,         
condescends to the humble affection of a hen watching         over her         chickens.
In his volume Calvin on Common Grace
 Herman         Kuiper enumerates a long list of passages in John's 
gospel, to         take         but a single book, in which Calvin finds
 “the idea that God         invites         both elect and reprobate men
 to salvation and offers salvation         to all         men 
promiscuously”. The list follows: John 1:6; 1:11; 1:29;         1:36,         37; 1:43; 3:14, 15; 3:16; 3:17, 18; 3:36; 4:19; 5:35; 5:40;         6:31, 32;         6:36; 6:49, 50; 6:66; 8:21; 12:47, 48; 15:22; 17:3; 20:23 (p.         148). The same writer puts the question:
How
 can it be said that God is solicitous for the         salvation of and 
wills the repentance of those whom he has         predestinated to 
everlasting perdition in His eternal counsel?
Speaking
 of Calvin's teaching of reprobation on the         one         hand and
 on the other of his teaching of the sincere offer of         salvation 
to all to whom the gospel comes, he asserts:
We
 may as well try to budge a mountain of solid         granite         
with our finger as endeavor to harmonize these declarations.
He reasons on:
Must
 we then conclude that Calvin taught that God         has a         
double will and is at variance with Himself? Our author [Calvin]        
 expressly declares that he emphatically repudiates the view that       
  God         has more than one will. He explicitly teaches that we must
 not         think         that God has a double will. God does not in 
Himself will         opposites. But it is impossible for us to 
comprehend and fathom         the Most High. To our apprehension the 
will of God is manifold.         As far as we can         see, God does 
will what seems to be opposed to His will.
Kuiper concludes:
In
 short, Calvin makes it plain that in his view         the         
paradoxes which we have just reviewed are paradoxes involved in         
the         teaching of Holy Scripture itself (pp. 223f.).
In his Systematic Theology, vol. II, p.         644,         Charles Hodge says:
It
 is further said to be inconsistent with the         sincerity         
of God, to offer salvation to those whom he has predetermined to        
 leave to the just recompense of their sins. It is enough to say        
 in         answer to this objection, so strenuously urged by Lutherans 
and         Arminians, that is bears with equal force against the 
doctrine         of         God's foreknowledge, which they admit to be 
an essential         attribute of         his nature . . . There is no 
real difficulty in either case         except         what is purely 
subjective. It is in us, in our limited and         partial         
apprehensions; and in our inability to comprehend the ways of         
our         God, which are past finding out.
And after quoting 1 Timothy 2:3, 4,
 “God our         Saviour,         who will have all men to be saved, 
and to come unto the         knowledge of         the truth”, together 
with Ezekiel 33:11, he says:
God
 forbid that any man should teach anything         inconsistent with 
these precious declarations of the Word of         God. They clearly 
teach that God is a benevolent Being; that He         delights         
not in the sufferings of his creatures . . . God pities even the        
 wicked whom He condemns, as a father pities the disobedient         
child         whom He chastises. And as the father can truthfully and 
with a         full         heart say that he delights not in the 
sufferings of his child,         so our         Father in heaven can 
say, that He delights not in the death of         the         wicked (p.
 651).
Says Herman Bavinck in his Gereformeerde           Dogmatiek,         vol. IV, p. 7:
Although
 through calling salvation becomes the         portion         of but a 
few, . . . it [calling] nevertheless has great value         and        
 significance for those also who reject it. It is for all without       
  exception proof of God's infinite love and it seals the         
statement         that He has no pleasure in the death of the sinner, 
but therein         that         he turn and live.
In The Christian View of Man, pp. 74f., J.         Gresham Machen says:
The
 doctrine of predestination does not mean that         God         
rejoices in the death of a sinner. The Bible distinctly says the        
 contrary. Hear that great verse in the thirty-third chapter of         
Ezekiel: 'As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in         
the         death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way 
and         live.
He goes on to say that in his opinion 1 Timothy 2:4         “means very much what that great Ezekiel passage means”.
Berkhof in his Systematic Theology, pp.         460ff.,         upholds both the universality and the sincerity of the gospel         invitation. He says:
It
 is not confined to any age or nation or class of         men. It comes 
to both the just and the unjust, the elect and the         reprobate.
He offers as irrefutable proof Isaiah 45:22,
 “Look         unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth; for I
 am         God,         and there is none else”. He proceeds:
The
 external calling is a calling in good faith, a         calling that is 
seriously meant. It is not an invitation coupled         with the hope 
that it will not be accepted. When God calls the         sinner to 
accept Christ by faith He earnestly desires this; and         when      
   He promises those who repent and believe eternal life, His         
promise is         dependable. This follows from the very nature, from 
the         veracity, of         God. It is blasphemous to think that 
God would be guilty of         equivocation and deception, that He would
 say one thing and mean         another, that He would earnestly plead 
with the sinner to repent         and         believe unto salvation, 
and at the same time not desire it in         any         sense of the 
word.
And
 when faced with the objection that according to         this         
doctrine God offers the forgiveness of sins and eternal life to         
those         for whom he has not intended these gifts, Berkhof admits 
frankly         that         there is “a real difficulty” at this point,
 but insists that it         may not be assumed that there is a 
contradiction.
Incidentally
 it maybe remarked here that when, in         1924,         one of the 
very few churches in this country which takes the         Reformed      
   faith seriously deposed certain ministers of the gospel, one         
ground,         among others, for this action was the denial by these 
ministers         of         the sincerity of the divine offer of 
salvation to all men.
The
 supreme importance for evangelism of         maintaining the         
Reformed doctrine of the gospel as a universal and sincere offer        
 of         salvation is self evident.
Again
 we are confronted by a situation which is         inadequately 
described as amazing. Once more there is a problem         which has 
left the greatest theologians of history baffled. The         very      
   Word of God does not present a solution. But Dr. Clark asserts       
  unblushingly that for his thinking the difficulty is         
non-existent         (35:20-36:2; 47:1f.). Here is something phenomenal.
 What         accounts         for it? The most charitable, and no doubt
 the correct,         explanation         is that Dr. Clark has fallen 
under the spell of rationalism.         Rather         than subject his 
reason to the divine Word he insists on         logically         
harmonizing with each other two evident but seemingly         
contradictory         teachings of that Word, although in the process he
 detracts from         one         of these teachings.
The
 conclusion is inescapable that Dr. Clark's         rationalism has 
resulted in his obscuring—to say the very         least—a         
signficant teaching of Scripture—a truth which constitutes one         
off         the most glorious aspects of the gospel of the grace of God.
* * *
It
 will appear from the above examination of the         views         of 
Dr. Clark as they were propounded to the Presbytery of         
Philadelphia that these errors are far from being peripheral.         
The         very doctrine of God is undermined by a failure to maintain a
         qualitative distinction between the knowledge of God and the   
      knowledge possible to man, thus denying the doctrine of the       
  incomprehensibility of God and impinging in a most serious         
fashion         upon the transcendence of the Creator over the creature.
 The         interpretation of Christianity as being fundamentally      
   intellectualism         subordinates the volition to the intellect in
 a manner that is         flagrantly in violation of the teaching of 
Scripture and of the         Reformed theology. Similarly emotion as an 
element in the mind         of         God and in the mind of the 
Christian is disallowed. And the         views         concerning human 
responsibility and of the free offer of the         gospel         
likewise clearly affect decisively one's conception of matter         
that         are of the greatest possible moment to every Christian.
Nor
 do these errors concern only isolated details.         In         all 
of these matters there is manifest a rationalistic approach         to  
       Christian theology. The highest activity in man is the         
intellectual         activity; his highest goal is the intellectual 
contemplation of         God. In connection with his answer to the 
question as to the         extent to         which man may comprehend 
God, Clark admits the dependence of man         upon         the 
revelation of God but, on the basis of a rationalistic         
dialectic,         maintains that any knowledge that man possesses of 
any item must         coincide with God's knowledge of the same item in 
order to be         true         knowledge, thus failing to distinguish 
between the Creator's         knowledge of any thing and creaturely 
knowledge of the same         thing. And, even though he speaks of the 
infinity of God's         knowledge, he         does not rise above a 
quantitative distinction between the         content of         the 
knowledge of God and the content of the knowledge which man         may 
        possess. And in pursuance of his effort to penetrate into the   
      mind         of God he sets aside, or attempts to set aside, by 
resort to         reason,         the paradoxes which Reformed theology 
has recognized as existing         for         the human mind between 
the divine foreordination and human         responsibility and between 
predestination and the divine offer         of         salvation to all 
men, with the consequences that the doctrines         of         human 
responsibility and of the free offer of salvation to all         fail   
      to be set forth in any adequate way. These innovations are then   
      not         curiosities of an innocent sort, but concern some of 
the most         central         doctrines of the Christian faith, 
including even the         all-decisive         subject of the doctrine 
of God. And the result of this         rationalistic         approach to
 theology is a failure to maintain the balanced,         comprehensively
 Biblical, character of historic, classic         Calvinism         
which is set forth in the standards of The Orthodox Presbyterian        
 Church.
In
 bringing this complaint to the attention of the         Presbytery of 
Philadelphia, the complainants further petition         the         
Presbytery to make amends as follows:
If the Presbytery is not ready to acknowledge that         the         meeting of July 7th
 was illegal and that all of its         acts         and decisions are 
therefore null and void, the complainants         request         that 
it acknowledge that various views of Dr. Clark as set forth         in  
       that meeting, and with which this complaint is concerned, are in 
        error and in conflict with the constitutional requirements for  
       licensure and ordination, and that, therefore, the decision to   
      sustain his theological examination, the decision to waive two    
     years         of study in a theological seminary, the decision to 
proceed to         license Dr. Clark and the action of licensing him, 
the decision         to         deem the examination for licensure 
sufficient for ordination,         and the         decision to ordain 
Dr. Clark, were in error and         unconstitutional, and         are, 
therefore, null and void.
(Signed)
JOHN WISTAR BETZOID
EUGENE BRADFORD
R. B. KUIPER
LEROY B. OLIVER
N. B. STONEHOUSE
MURRAY FORST THOMPSON
WILLIAM E. WELMERS
PAUL WOOLLEY
CORNELIUS VAN TIL
EDWARD J. YOUNG
DAVID FREEMAN
ARTHUR W. KUSCHKE, JR.
The
 undersigned hereby subscribes to the complaint         against certain 
actions of the Presbyery of Philadelphia taken         at its         
meeting on July 7th, 1944, to the extent of         
concurring in         the statement of the reasons for the complaint as 
set forth         herein: LESLIE W. SLOAT.
 
 
 
 
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1 comment:
Any errors found please let me know. I have already corrected one error found by someone who proofed The Complaint.
The error was corrected as follows:
"The divine knowledge as human, even when that human knowledge is a knowledge communicated by God.”
The sentence should read:
“The divine knowledge as divine, transcends human knowledge as human, even when that human knowledge is a knowledge communicated by God.”
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