Название: The Lord Is the Spirit
Автор: John A. Studebaker
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Религия: прочее
Серия: Evangelical Theological Society Monograph Series
isbn: 9781630876852
isbn:
7. Welker, God the Spirit, 21–22.
8. Hodgson, Winds of the Spirit, 284.
9. Lloyd-Jones, Authority, 62.
10. In speaking of the “Church,” I am referring broadly to Christ’s universal Church, unless referring to the local “church” (as I shall frequently in chapter six).
11. I am defining “practical theology” as the application of the results of systematic theology to the development of the church’s overall “ministry,” both theoretically and practically (i.e. “practical theology” would thereby include the theory and practice of hermeneutics, church government, and spirituality).
12. One of the best discussions of the “principle” and “pattern” of authority in Christianity is found in Bernard Ramm’s The Pattern of Authority. This book will serve as a basis for understanding many of the essential concepts used herein.
13. Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 10.
14. Webster and McKechnie, “Authority,” 126.
15. Imperial authority is that which is “possessed by persons or ruling bodies by reason of superior position such as that of a king” (Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 10); DeGeorge defines executive authority as “the right or the power to act in certain ways” (DeGeorge, The Nature and Limits of Authority, 62).
16. Such a principle only leads to “authoritarianism,” which is “the sheer appeal to authority, or the excessive claims of an authority” (Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 19).
17. Ibid., 18 (emphasis mine).
18. Ibid., 21.
19. Ibid., 26.
20. Ibid., 21 (emphasis his).
21. Frame, The Doctrine of the Knowledge of God, 16.
22. See Lewis, “Attributes of God,” 453–58. Divine transcendence has traditionally been a watershed attribute for “theism.” “The incomparable divine transcendence involves a radical dualism between God and the world. . . . A biblical theist not only believes that the one, living God is separate from the world, as against pantheism and panentheism, but also that God is continually active throughout the world providentially, in contrast to deism” (Lewis, “Attributes of God,” 458).
23. While Frame holds that both divine authority and divine control demonstrate transcendence (“divine transcendence in Scripture seems to center on the concepts of control and authority”), he also seems to distinguish the way they do so. Divine authority demonstrates transcendence in that “divine authority transcends all other loyalties (Exod 20:3; Deut 6:4f; Matt 8:19–22, 10:34–38; Phil 3:8)” (Frame, The Doctrine of the Knowledge of God, 15–16). Divine control, however, is made evident “by God’s sovereign power” (p, 15).
24. Frame, The Doctrine of the Knowledge of God, 16.
25. Ibid., 16.
26. Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 14. This is confirmed by the Latin word for authority, auctoritas, which refers to “personal influence” and is derived from the auctor, a person who “brings about the existence of any object” (Watt, Authority, 11).
27. This also implies that our principle of authority is free from subjectivism—it finds its locus not in the individual “under” authority but in the Father, Son, and Spirit who “possess” divine authority (see Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 21).
28. Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 19.
29. Ramm explains, “All authority must be personally recognized. This is not, to be very sure, the grounds of authority. An authority becomes authoritative to a person only as that person accepts the authority through personal decision. This would appear to taint all authority with the leaven of subjectivism, but this is so only if the grounds of authority are confused with the personal acceptance of authority” (Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 14).
30. Ramm defines divine revelation as “the religious object determining the character and truth of religion to the subjects of religion” (ibid., 20). See also Oden, Life in the Spirit, 23.
31. Ramm adds, “It must be understood that there is not dilution of authority in its delegation” (Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 27).
32. Ibid., 27.
33. Ramm proclaims, “The duality of the Word and the Spirit must always be maintained, for it is in this duality that the Protestant and Christian principle of authority exists” (ibid., 30). Ramm also provides helpful documentation of this thesis in Protestant theology. This includes: Calvin, who entitles one chapter in his Institutes, “The Testimony of the Spirit Necessary to Confirm the Scripture, in Order to the Complete Establishment of Its Authority” (Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, chap. VII); Luther, who states, “I believe that I can not by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ my Lord, or come to him; but the Holy Ghost has called me through the Gospel . . .” (Luther, Small Catechism); and Arminius, who asserts, “the Holy Spirit, by whose inspiration holy men of God have spoken this word . . . is the author of that light by the aid of which we obtain a perception and an understanding of the divine meanings of the word, and is the Effector of that Certainty by which we believed those meanings to be truly divine” (Arminius, The Writings of Arminius, 1:140).
34. Ramm, The Pattern of Authority, 37.
35. Ibid., 36.