The Fundamental Principle of Calvinism - Henry Meeter
CALVINISM A UNIFIED,
ALL-COMPREHENSIVE SYSTEM OF THOUGHT
The significance of John Calvin for the modern era is vividly described in these
words: "The sixteenth was a great century. It was the century of Raphael
and Michelangelo, of Spenser and Shakespeare, of Erasmus and Rabelais, of
Copernicus and Galileo, of Luther and Calvin. Of all the figures that gave
greatness to this century, none left a more lasting heritage than Calvin.1 To
the investigation of the heritage of Calvin, the following pages are devoted.
Calvinism is the name applied to the system of thought which has come down to us
from John Calvin. He is recognized as the chief exponent of that system,
although he is not the originator of the ideas set forth in it. The theological
views of Calvin, together with those of the other great leaders of the
Protestant Reformation, are known to be a revival of Augustinianism, which in
its turn was only a revival of the teachings of St. Paul centuries previous. But
it was Calvin who, for modern times, first gave the presentation of these views
in systematic form and with the specific application which since his day has
become known to us as Calvinism.
These teachings constitute a unity. Calvinism is not the mere aggregate of
opinions, the sum total of ideas, held by Calvin and Calvinists, but it is an
organic whole with one fundamental principle as the common root. It is not
always or necessarily the case that the views of a group constitute a unity. The
views of the Roman Catholic Church prior to the time of their great organizer,
Thomas Aquinas (1227-1274), or officially prior to the Council of Trent
(1545-1563), did not form a unity but lay scattered among the declarations of
church councils and papal decrees, and contained numerous conflicting elements.
Likewise, the political views of the Republican Party or of the Democratic Party
do not comprise a unity. However, the system derived from John Calvin can claim
such distinction.
Calvinism does not restrict itself to theology; but it is an all-comprehensive
system of thought, including within its scope views on politics, society,
science, and art as well as theology. It presents a view of life and of the
universe as a whole, a world- and life-view. In fact, it has even been described
as one of the few basic systems of thought that have ever been offered to man.
James Orr limits the basic philosophic systems of the world to the low number of
twelve, and considers all other philosophic systems to be modifications of
these. Abraham Kuyper reduces the number of basic systems of thought to only
four, of which Calvinism is accounted as one.
THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE OF CALVINISM
Each unified system of thought is governed by an inherent fundamental principle
or principles. This is also true of Calvinism. Beginning in the early nineteenth
century, scholars, representing various schools of opinion, made a study to
determine the genius of the Calvinistic movement.2 Among these were scholars who
had no eye for the organic unity within the system itself. They satisfied
themselves with discovering some dominant trait which, in their estimation, set
off Calvinism from other systems of thought. Thus, some characterized Calvinism
as a religious system in which the spirit of democracy and the passion for
liberty was the distinguishing trait. This spirit was thought to have been
derived from the liberty-loving Swiss among whom Calvinism arose. Others who had
an eye for the legal aspects of the movement and the note of authority, found in
these the cardinal trait, and attributed it to the legal training of Calvin.
Others considered the dominating characteristic to be the marvelous order and
system which is peculiar to Calvinism. This was supposed to be due to Calvin’s
French temper of mind. Like the noted French military generals, he possessed the
singular ability to marshal a stupendous array of facts, to organize and to mold
them into one vast system. Others thought the prime factor of Calvinism to be
its thorough break with the Scholasticism of the Middle Ages, thus considering
Calvin an advanced religious liberal. This trait was attributed to the
humanistic training of his youth.
While these suggestions do contain grains of truth and do point to some marked
feature in the system, none of them merits the distinction to be designated the
dominant characteristic of Calvinism, much less its fundamental principle.
William Hastie calls such suggestions "conjectures of ingenious thinkers
inadequately acquainted with the conditions of the problem, rather than
scientific conclusions derived from a full and exhaustive examination of the
available material."3 Those who have made exhaustive study of the problem
will agree with R. Seeberg that "this humanistically trained Frenchman was
above all an evangelical Christian, and his whole world-view in the end was
determined by his evangelical spirit."4
The fundamental principle, if anywhere, lies precisely in the field of the
evangelical doctrines of the Calvinists and in these doctrines conceived not as
mere abstractions, but as living, vital truths which motivated and dominated the
whole of their lives. We may safely say that the fundamental principle concerns
the doctrine of God. However scientific investigators may describe the
fundamental principle of Calvinism, they are quite agreed with the philosopher
W. Dilthey that the theological viewpoint is characteristic of the entire
Calvinistic movement for the first one hundred and fifty years, that the
Calvinist of that time was always placing God at the center of his thoughts.5 An
examination of the Calvinistic Confessions, especially those of early
Reformation times, or of the works of Calvin will supply ample evidence of
this.6
The central thought of Calvinism is, therefore, the great thought of
God. Someone has remarked: "Just as the Methodist places in the
foreground the idea of the salvation of sinners, the Baptist—the mystery of
regeneration, the Lutheran — justification by faith, the Moravian — the
wounds of Christ, the Greek Catholic — the mysticism of the Holy Spirit, and
the Romanist — the catholicity of the church, so the Calvinist is always
placing in the foreground the thought of God."7 The Calvinist does not
start out with some interest of man; for example, his conversion or his
justification, but has as his informing thought always: How will God
come to His rights! He seeks to realize as his ruling concept in life the truth
of Scripture: "Of Him , and through Him, and to Him are all things. To whom
be glory forever."8
On this point there is widespread unanimity among the investigators. It is only
when they proceed to express this idea in a definite formula that disagreements
arise. Some have suggested that the attribute of God’s self-existence (aseitas),
as the most basic attribute we know in God, should be considered the fundamental
principle of Calvinism. It is questionable whether the fundamental principle can
be so stated; for it is not something in God, some specific attribute, that is
basic to the system, but God Himself. Moreover, the term
"self-existence" does not express God’s relation to the world
outside of Him, at least not directly; and, therefore, can hardly be designated
as the formative principle of a world-view which is to express this relation.
God would be self-existent even if there were no world. Some term is needed
which will express the relationship in which God stands to His created universe.
The term which seems to indicate this relationship best and is adopted by many,
is "the absolute sovereignty of God", or more specifically stated
"the absolute sovereignty of God in the natural and the moral
spheres."
The sense in which the term "sovereignty of God" is used needs to be
well understood if it is to be safeguarded against gross misunderstanding. To
the popular mind the term is likely to suggest that the Calvinist views God as a
mere royal Ruler or Master who lays down the law to His creatures, and that the
spirit of love in God and His grace and similar attributes are to be dissociated
from the idea of His sovereignty. It is not a surprise that some scholars like
A. Ritschl who have so interpreted the Calvinistic idea of the sovereignty of
God suggest that the sovereignty of God is an inadequate fundamental principle
for religion and that it ought to be superseded by the idea of the love of God.
But certainly no good Calvinist would ever subscribe to such a limited view of
God’s sovereignty. Sovereignty is not even considered an attribute in God but
a prerogative. What the Calvinist has in mind when he speaks of the
sovereignty of God is something far broader than the idea that God is the
Promulgator and Defender of the moral and physical laws of the universe.
According to the Calvinist, God is not only the supreme Lawgiver and Ruler; but
God is supreme also in the realm of truth, in science, and in art quite as much
as in the realm of morals, in the dissemination of His love and grace and all
His gifts as well as in the administration of the laws which men are to live by
or which operate in nature. The Calvinist believes that God does not act
arbitrarily either in the dissemination of His gifts or in His providential
control of man and nature. Order is heaven’s first law. The realm of truth and
of love, the scientific and the moral world, as well as the world of nature, is
subject to law and order. The Calvinist observes in the universe created by God
and maintained by His Providence a beautiful system of law, order and harmony,
apparent in the realm of nature and that of grace, in the intellectual and moral
life of men, in the distribution of all good — an all-pervasive system, all of
God’s making. In this distribution and administration of all things, God
remains supreme. "Of Him, and through Him, and to Him are all things."
When the term "sovereignty of God" is, accordingly, Understood, not as
a mere legalistic phrase indicative of God as the supreme Legislator and the One
who has created the laws of nature, but in the more pregnant sense just
described, there is nothing against the usage of the term to indicate thereby
the fundamental principle of Calvinism. On the contrary, it would seem that it
is then precisely the term to designate the absolute supremacy of God in all
things, and is, therefore, exactly the term to be used when we wish to construct
a system with God at the center. This is precisely what the Calvinist has in
mind when he employs the term. As the great Calvinist B. B. Warfield has
expressed it: "From these things shine out upon us the formative principle
of Calvinism. The Calvinist is the man who sees God behind all phenomena
and in all that occurs recognizes the hand of God, working out His will; who
makes the attitude of the soul to God in prayer its permanent attitude in all
its life-activities; and who casts himself on the grace of God alone, excluding
every trace of dependence on self from the whole work of his salvation."9
The same author in another place asserts that the fundamental principle
of Calvinism "lies in a profound apprehension of God in His majesty,
with the inevitably accompanying poignant realization of the exact relation
sustained to Him by the creature as such, and particularly by the sinful
creature. . . The Calvinist is the man who has seen God, and who,
having seen God in His glory, is filled on the one hand with a sense of his own
unworthiness to stand in God’s sight as a creature, and much more as a sinner,
and on the other with adoring wonder that nevertheless this God is a God Who
receives sinners. He who believes in God without reserve, and is
determined that God shall be God to him, in all his thinking, feeling, willing
— in the entire compass of his life-activities, intellectual, moral, spiritual
— throughout all his individual, social, religious relations — is by the
force of the strictest of all logic which presides over the outworking of
principles into thought and life, by the very necessity of the case, a
Calvinisim"10
FALLACIOUS STATEMENTS OF THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE
With this description in mind it is easy to detect the fallacies in certain
formulations of the fundamental principle of Calvinism. No statement of it is
adequate which limits the supremacy of God in any way to certain spheres or to
certain activities. It is a notable error to make of the doctrine of election or
predestination the fundamental principle. A popular notion that a Calvinist is a
man who believes that God in a fatalistic way has decreed where man is to live
in eternity must be dismissed immediately. As Charles Hodge has pointed out, the
Calvinistic doctrine of predestination and fatalism agree in only one point:
"Both assume absolute certainty in the sequence of all events. But they
differ in the ground of this certainty, the nature of the influence by which it
is secured, the ends contemplated, and the effects on the reason and the
conscience of men."11
But even if we properly interpret predestination as the Calvinist would have us
understand it, even so predestination could not be the fundamental
principle of Calvinism. This is true for a variety of reasons. Predestination
always concerns itself with man, with what is to become of him. It is not
anything that may or may not happen to man that is fundamental to the Calvinist;
but it is the thought of the divine Being, His majesty, His greatness that
primarily interests him. Furthermore, predestination treats only of
God’s activities with fallen man, and leaves oñt of consideration God’s
dealings with original man in the state of rectitude. It also limits God’s
activities to the world of moral beings, to men, and says nothing, at least not
directly, about God’s relationship to the world of nature. The Calvinist can
know of no such limitation of the thought of God. He must place the idea of God
in the foreground everywhere. From a theoretical point of view it is evident,
therefore, that predestination cannot be considered the fundamental principle of
Calvinism.
If we examine the Calvinistic Confessions, especially the earlier ones, those
drafted by Calvin or under his influence, or The Institutes of Calvin, we shall
soon discover that predestination is not the fundamental principle. In some of
these Confessions the thought of predestination is not even as much as
mentioned, in others it is only cited in passing. In The Institutes the doctrine
of predestination is treated not as the basis of the system, but as a conclusion
rather than as a premise, in the soteriological section. It was only when the
Biblical doctrine of predestination was attacked by Pighuis that Calvin felt
constrained to come to its defense in his treatises on "A Defense of the
Secret Providence of God" and "The Eternal Predestination of
God." Rather than call predestination the fundamental principle,
it is more accurate to assert that predestination is a logical conclusion of
Calvinism, or as E. Doumergue phrases it, the keystone rather than
the foundation of the system.12 When once you have adopted the view that God
shall be God in the full sweep of His many relationships to His creatures, you
will arrive at predestination as a very logical conclusion. All limitations of
God’s decree regarding man restrict God’s supremacy and infringe upon His
majesty.
The glory of God is another definition of the fundamental principle which has
been proposed. It is a definition which is popular with the masses in
Calvinistic circles. Calvinism has been defined as that system in which God is
most highly glorified and man is most deeply abased. There is a very vital truth
in this assertion. The Calvinist does make it an all- embracing purpose to
glorify God in all walks of life. Nevertheless, as a definition that statement
places too great limitation upon the activity of God. The Calvinist is not only
interested in including God in the purposes of life — living for His glory but
God is his first thought also when he thinks of the origin and providential
control of all things. The purposive statement, the glory of God, is not
sufficiently inclusive to be denominated the fundamental principle of Calvinism.
Some who have manifested deep concern for the responsibility of man and have
feared that the emphasis on God’s activity would crowd out the responsibility
of man have proposed as the fundamental principle the combined thought of God’s
sovereign decree and the responsibility of man, since they saw in Calvinism an
emphasis upon both factors. It is undoubtedly true that Calvinism does stress
human responsibility to a very high degree. But again it would not be
according to the genius of the Calvinist to place God’s sovereign decree and
man’s responsibility, or any other aspect of man, on a level. God
is to the Calvinist the first and last word, the primary thought always.
God’s sovereign decree and man’s responsibility do present themselves to the
human mind as an apparent contradiction, an antinomy, a paradox, something which
the mind of man fails to solve. This paradox, like the one of God’s
transcendence and His immanence, or spirit and matter, the Calvinist readily
adopts, even though he cannot solve it. However, he adopts this paradox, not
because he holds to two coequal fundamental principles, God’s sovereignty and
the freedom and responsibility of man, but just because he wants to let God be
God. He discovers that God in His written Word has stressed the responsibility
of man, and that He is in no wise accountable for the sin of man, even though He
is Ruler of all. It is just because the Calvinist would let God be God, that is,
the final Authority for his thinking, even when his own logic fails to give an
adequate account of things, that he accepts the full responsibility of man, as
God has informed him in His Word. The sovereignty of God, it will then be seen,
is a prior thought to the responsibility of man.
Several other proposals have been made to designate the fundamental principle of
Calvinism which need not be given special consideration here. No statement of
the fundamental principle will be adequate which does not do full justice to the
thought of God as the basic and central thought of Calvinism, since such a
thought is by common consent its essence.
THE SYSTEM BASED UPON THIS FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE
With the sovereignty of God in the natural and the moral spheres as
fundamental principle the Calvinist has built up his whole system.
It involves widespread implications for the views which the Calvinist entertains
regarding theology, politics, sociology, science and art, in fact the whole of
life, as succeeding chapters will disclose.
Besides the fundamental principle there are corollary principles which should be
mentioned here, because they are for the Calvinist axiomatic-principia, first
principles which underlie the whole system. Of special prominence is the one,
which is familiarly known to us as the formal principle of the Protestant
Reformation; namely, that God has given to fallen man, besides the general
revelation in nature, a special revelation of Himself and of His works in the
Bible as the Word of God. Because this Bible, or rather God in the Bible,
presents to us a specific interpretation of God’s works in nature and a
special revelation of His redemptive works, it becomes for the Calvinist the
ultimate and binding source of information concerning God and the world. This
objective revelation man accepts through a God-given faith.
The Bible, as revelation of God, teaches the following facts of basic
significance to the Calvinistic system: that God, Who has revealed Himself in
His Word, is Sovereign over all things, and that God differs essentially from
all things created by Him; that as regards religion, or the relation of God to
His image-bearer, man, it holds this to be of the nature of a covenant, and as
such was already specially revealed to original man in the state of
righteousness; that the world today does not exist in a pure state but is fallen
in sin. Furthermore, regarding the fallen world, the Bible maintains: that man
is totally depraved and that the world, over which God placed him as ruler,
exists today in a corrupt state as a result of sin; that Death has come into the
world as a punishment for sin; and that the sovereign God has revealed his
grace, which affects both individual and social conditions, in the divinely
given Mediator, Jesus Christ.13 What hypotheses are to a philosophic
system, these facts derived from Scripture are to the Calvinistic system; they
underlie and control that system in its many ramifications.
Notes
Harkness, Georgia, John Calvin, the Man and His Ethics, p. 258 (New York: Henry
Holt and Company, 1931).
For a survey of the literature on this subject, consult: Hastie, W. The Theology
of the Reformed Church in its Fundamental Principles (Edinburgh, 1904); Voigt,
H., Fundamental Dogmatik (Gothal 1874); Bauke, H., Die Probleme der Theologie
Calvins (Alfred Topelmann, Giessen, 1910); Meeter, H. H., The Fundamental
Principle of Calvinism (Grand Rapids, Mich.; Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,
1930).
Hastie, W., The Theology of the Reformed Church in its Fundamental Principles,
p. 142 (Edinburgh, 1904).
Seeberg, Reinhold, Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte Band IV 2 Halfte, pp. 558, 659.
Dilthey, W., Die Glaubenslehre der Reformation in Preuss. Jahrb. 1894, p. 80,
quoted by H. Bauke, op. cit., p 25.
Meeter, H.H., The Fundamental Principle of Calvinism (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Wm.
B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., pp. 51-55, 1930).
Pressly, Mason W., Calvinism and Science, Article in Ev. Repertoire, 1891, p.
662.
Romans 11:36.
Warfield, B. B, Calvin as a Theologian and Calvinism Today, pp. 23, 24,
Presbyterian Board of Publication, Phila., 1909.
Ibid, pp. 22, 23.
Hodge, Chas., Systematic Theology, Vol. I, p. 548 (London and Edinburgh, Thomas
Nelson & Sons, 1872).
Doumergue, B., Jean Calvin, Vol. IV, p. 857, quoted by Bauke, H., Die Problem.
der Theologie Calvins, p. 84 (Alfred Topelmann, Giessen, 1910).
Bavinck, H. Christelijke Wetenschap (Kainpen, Netherlands, L H. Kok, 1913)
Gereformeerde Dogmatiek, Vol. I, pp. 237, 309-310 (Kampen, Netherlands, J. H.
Bos, 1911); Vollenhoven, D. H., Th.,Het Calvinisme en de Reformatie van de
Wijsbegeerte, pp. 20, 21 (Amsterdam, Netherlands, H. 3. Paris, 1933).
Author
Dr. H. Henry Meeter, TH.D served for thirty years as Chairman of the Bible
Department at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan
This article was taken from The Basic Ideas of Calvinism, Chapter I, pp.
29-40 (Grand Rapids, Baker Book House, 1939).