... is a number of interesting-looking articles, including ones by David
Fergusson, Thomas Tracy and Thomas Jay Oord in a section entitled ‘Human Nature
in Theistic and Evolutionary Perspectives’. The table of contents for Zygon 48:2 is here.
I have also updated bibliography F. Science and Divine Action.
Providence, Divine Action and the Church
Thoughts and Research on the Christian Doctrine of God's Providence
About Providence, Divine Action and the Church
In this blog, Terry J. Wright posts thoughts and shares research on the Christian doctrine of providence. This doctrine testifies to God's provision for all things through creation's high priest, the man Christ Jesus. However, the precise meaning and manner of this provision is a perpetually open question, and this blog is a forum for discussion of the many issues relating to providence and the place of the Church within God's action.
Friday, 31 May 2013
Saturday, 25 May 2013
Some (Potentially) Interesting Articles in The Heythrop Journal
The latest edition of The Heythrop Journal features essays potentially germane to the doctrine of
providence:
Gloria L. Schaab, ‘Incarnation as Emergence: A Transformative Vision of God and the Cosmos’, The Heythrop Journal 54:4 (2013), pp. 631–644Craig A. Baron, ‘God is Deeper than Darwin: John Haught’s Catholic Theology and Science’, The Heythrop Journal 54:4 (2013), pp. 645–657Ignacio Silva, ‘Thomas Aquinas Holds Fast: Objections to Aquinas within Today’s Debate on Divine Action’, The Heythrop Journal 54:4 (2013), pp. 658–667Daniel Lim, ‘Why Not Overdetermination?’, The Heythrop Journal 54:4 (2013), pp. 668–677
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
On Tornadoes, Job and Providence
Comment
One: Those of us who are neither citizens of the United States nor fans
of the ways in which ‘Western’ media prioritises ‘Western’ events over those
in, say, Indonesia cannot lose sight of the fact that this week’s tornado in Oklahoma was, indeed, a tragedy. The survivors in Moore remain in my prayers;
the fact that they’re from the so-called first world rather than the so-called
third world (forgive me if these are not the appropriate terms) ought not to
harden our hearts.
Comment
Two: Curiously, the Old
Testament reading for Morning Prayer (Common
Worship) this past Monday was Job 1, which contains this passage:
While this messenger was speaking, another arrived and said: “Your sons and your daughters were eating and drinking wine in their oldest brother’s house, when a strong wind came from the desert and struck the four corners of the house. It fell upon the young people, and they died. I alone escaped to tell you.” (Job 1:18-19 CEB)
Rachel Held Evans has drawn attention to John Piper’s tweet of Job 1:19, an apparent response to the Oklahoma tornado. She
interprets the tweet as Piper’s insinuation that the tornado constituted divine
judgement. (I don’t know if Piper has since elaborated on his tweet, but it’s
fair to say that as her post stands, Evans has imported Piper’s previous form
into his present [non-]comment.) If Evans is right and Piper is interpreting
the tornado as God’s judgement, then I don’t accept this interpretation. To
adapt a cruder phrase, tornadoes happen. And Oklahoma falls within Tornado Alley; tornadoes should be expected. Moreover, I think it’s extremely difficult
to interpret any natural disaster
specifically as God’s judgement. Without arguing the point too much, I suggest
that, biblically speaking, usually there’s some kind of prophetic announcement promising
actual judgement should repentance
not result from the proclamation of God’s forewarning
of judgement. At the very least, there would have to be some ecclesial
reflection on an event for it even to be considered as God’s action in judgement.
The reaction of one man, however godly, drafted on a mobile phone within hours
of its occurrence cannot be held as an authoritative interpretation of this
tornado and its ‘purpose’.
Comment
Three:
Consider these two passages from Job:
Job arose, tore his clothes, shaved his head, fell to the ground, and worshipped.He said: “Naked I came from my mother’s womb; naked I will return there. The LORD has given; the LORD has taken; bless the LORD’s name.”In all this, Job didn’t sin or blame God. (Job 1:20-22 CEB)
Job’s wife said to him, “Are you still clinging to your integrity? Curse God, and die.”Job said to her, “You’re talking like a foolish woman. Will we receive good from God but not also receive bad?” In all this, Job didn’t sin with his lips. (Job 2:9-10 CEB)
Job is often held up as an example of how to
respond to personal tragedy, but I’m not absolutely sure this is the case.
True, the texts mention that Job does not sin;
but this needn’t mean that what Job says in either instance is true. Look at this quotation, a comment
on Job 1:21:
Job sees only the hand of God in these events. It never occurs to him to curse the desert brigands, to curse the frontier guards, to curse his own stupid servants, now lying dead for their watchlessness. All secondary causes vanish. It was the Lord who gave; it was the Lord who removed; and in the Lord alone must the explanation of these strange happenings be sought.Francis I. Andersen, Job: An Introduction and Commentary. TOTC 14 (Nottingham: IVP, 1976) p. 93
If this is truly how Job saw his circumstances, if
all secondary causes for him had
vanished, then I have two things to say. First, perhaps facetiously, Job’s
opinion goes against the mighty John Calvin, who insisted that we should give
secondary causes their proper place. But secondly, and more seriously, the
character Job’s interpretation could simply be wrong – an error, not a sin –
and the omniscient narrator of Job (the book) is cognisant of this fact. Where
Job (the character) is no doubt
correct is in his turning towards God; but there’s so much in Scripture to
suggest that such a turning towards God need not include Jobic resignation, but
real protest and lament, and real pleas for restoration. And so for the people
of Moore, OK, and for all those devastated by tragedy, let us pray:
Lord God, whose Son, Jesus Christ,
understood people’s fear and pain
before they spoke of them,
we pray for those in hospital;
surround the frightened with your tenderness;
give strength to those in pain;
hold the weak in your arms of love,
and give hope and patience
to those who are recovering;
we ask this through the same Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
understood people’s fear and pain
before they spoke of them,
we pray for those in hospital;
surround the frightened with your tenderness;
give strength to those in pain;
hold the weak in your arms of love,
and give hope and patience
to those who are recovering;
we ask this through the same Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
Monday, 20 May 2013
Temple Studies Group, 2013 Symposium: Mary and the Temple
Here are the details of the next symposium of the Temple Studies Group:
Symposium VII will be held on Saturday, 15 June 2013 in the Temple Church, 10.00 am to 4.00 pm. Booking in advance is essential. The cost for the day is £35.00, or £5.00 for students with proof of status. Payment is made on the day of the symposium by cash or cheque only. Registration is from 9.30 am.
Speakers:
Archbishop Vahan Hovhanessian, Primate of the Armenian Church in Great Britain and Ireland: Mary in the Apocryphal Documents preserved in Armenian
Aidan Hart, ikon maker: Mary and the Temple in Ikons
Professor John Hall, Brigham Young University, Utah: The Lady in the Temple before the Hebrews: Hathor of Egypt
Dr Laurence Hemming, University of Lancaster: The Disappearance of Mary in the Temple: An Ambiguity in the Latin Liturgy
Dr Margaret Barker, Temple Studies Group: The Lady known to Isaiah
Monday, 29 April 2013
John Webster Moves to St Andrews
John Webster has been appointed to a Chair in Divinity at St
Mary’s College, the University of St Andrews. Of interest for this blog is the
press release, which notes Webster’s future publications:
He has several further books in press and in preparation, including God without Measure, On Creation and Providence, Ephesians (a theological commentary), and Perfection and Presence: God with Us.
On
Creation and Providence is planned for publication in 2014.
Thursday, 11 April 2013
Book Review: Doxological Theology [7]
Christopher
C. Green, Doxological Theology: Karl Barth on Divine Providence, Evil, and the Angels. T&T Clark Studies in
Systematic Theology, Vol. 13 (T&T Clark: London, 2011)
8. § 51, The Kingdom of
Heaven, the Ambassadors of God, and their Opponents
It’s
no surprise that Barth has arranged CD
III/3 so that the kingdom of heaven – or, more precisely, the praise of God in
the resurrected Jesus – is the final word on the doctrine of providence. Green not
only shows that §51 echoes the final statement of the Lord’s Prayer, with its tone
of praise, but also how providence and doxology are natural bedfellows. This
ties in with Barth’s ‘radical correction’ to the doctrine of providence: the
positioning of providence after God’s election in Christ, which reveals God
wholly to be gracious and not capricious. Thus God is genuinely praiseworthy,
and there is no need to construct a theodicy in order to explain the relation
between God’s holiness and God’s omnipotence.
For
Barth, says Green, doxology assumes material participation in Christ, which
means a participation in Christ’s priestly and kingly offices. Such
participation acknowledges and enjoys the risen Christ as Lord over all things.
There is no place to recognise das
Nichtige; indeed, from this angle, das
Nichtige does not even exist. Barth emphasises the place of the angels in
this worship of God in Christ: the angels are constantly praising, and earthly (human?)
praise is caught up in the song of heaven (Revelation 4–5) in such a way that
angelic praise may be said to anticipate earthly praise: ‘on earth as in
heaven’. And because angels are forever praising God, the will of God that
creation should praise God is met, even when there are earthly creatures that
persist in not praising God. In
short, doxology is the ascription to God of all that is God’s in the first
place (including good and bad – that
is, the good and the ‘shadow side’ of creation), and a material participation
in Christ, so that God’s holiness and omnipotence are held together through
Christ’s priestly and kingly offices. In this, Barth has returned to his
‘radical correction’, meaning that the issue of theodicy raised by the
possibility of divine capriciousness has now been settled by the genuine
praiseworthiness of God in Christ.
Green’s
chapter on Barth’s account of heaven, angels and demons (which are not an issue
for Barth as there is no place for demons when Christ rules as priest and king)
is a decent analysis, showing how all the themes emerging from §§48–50 find
suitable resolution in §51. Thus Green shows clearly why Barth concludes his
doctrine of providence with a discussion of the kingdom of heaven and Christ’s
resurrection, and why, for Barth, angelology (he discusses the liturgical
function of angels and refuses to speculate about angelic ontology) and
demonology must take second place to the resurrected Christ.
In
his conclusion, Green makes two important criticisms of Barth’s theology in CD III/3. The first centres on Barth’s
take on Christian participation in the material and formal offices of Christ.
Given that through this participation, the Christian can affirm the risen
Christ as Lord of all (the material offices) and recognise that this fact is
obscured by a world still subject in some sense to das Nichtige (the prophetic office). Barth’s critique of Reformed
orthodoxy on providence and evil exposes what he believes is an ambiguous
relation between God’s holiness and God’s omnipotence; but Green argues that
Barth has, in effect, relocated this ambiguity to the Christian’s participation
in Christ, in so far as the Christian has a double perspective on discerning
God’s providence. When it comes to participation in Christ’s prophetic office
through prayer, Green wonders if the Christian can ever truly know God as holy
in a meaningful way. Moreover, Green notices that because of his emphasis on
the Christian’s prayerful participation in Christ through the Spirit, Barth
presents God the Father as somewhat ‘eclipsed … in practice’ (Doxological Theology, p. 215) by the Son
and the Spirit. This, for Green, is a direct consequence of Barth’s ‘radical
correction’, because all that is known about the Father’s lordship in
providence is subsumed by the Son’s lordship.
Green’s
second criticism seems more straightforward: the topic of eternal life is dealt
with in §49.1 (on preservation) rather than in §51 (on the kingdom of heaven),
leading to the importance of heaven’s contemporaneity with earth in Barth’s
theology of providence. Again, Green sees the roots of this in Barth’s ‘radical
correction’. But Green also points out that Barth’s diminishment of heavenly
hope (read: afterlife) runs contrary to the majority of the Christian
tradition, and that the doctrine of providence is poorer if there is no
heavenly hope.
*****
So
what shall I conclude about Doxological
Theology? While it adds to a wealth of literature persuading me that I need
to read Barth on providence again and more closely, my impression is that
Green’s insights are especially useful for showing how Barth has structured CD III/3. Green has shown that CD III/3 is to be read as a whole, and
that §§50-51 are not merely add-ons to §§48-49. Moreover, Green demonstrates
that providence is not an abstract doctrine, that doxology is at its heart, and
that Barth’s genius on the matter was perhaps to show how providence is not
solely a doctrine about God but also about creaturely participation in Christ;
about creaturely obedience and not mechanical causality. If Green is right in
his interpretation of Barth, I am not convinced that Barth’s take on the
Christian’s perception of das Nichtige
is correct, though it is certainly an interesting approach; but this is, of
course, an issue with Barth, not with Green. I do wish there was more critical
analysis of Barth, but Green does state in his opening chapter that this was
not really his intention. And believe me, it’s enough for Green to have
supplied such a wonderfully detailed commentary on CD III/3!
In
short, I believe that Doxological
Theology is an important contribution to Barth studies and more generally
to studies on providence. And if anyone is currently working on a Ph.D thesis, Doxological Theology – a revised
doctoral thesis – is a prime example of what can be achieved in a three-year
period.
Let
me close with a quotation from p. 220, in which Green ably summarises Barth’s
approach to the doctrine of providence:
Barth writes his doctrine of providence on his knees. Like “sinking Peter,” who turns away from anxiety toward Christ in a moment of dire need, he soberly assures us that this is the correct stance of the theologian before the Lord of history. Therefore, he prays his way through the doctrine of providence, and he does this according to the prayer that is given to him by the Lord.
Wednesday, 10 April 2013
Vacancies at the University of St Andrews
Steve tells us about some new positions going
at St Mary’s College, the University of St Andrews.
Applications are invited for the post of Senior Lecturer/Reader in Systematic and Historical Theology in the School of Divinity, an internationally renowned centre of excellence. Applicants must have appropriate academic qualifications in Christian theology, including a PhD, and primary expertise in the field of Systematic Theology. You must have experience of successful teaching, assessment and supervision in a tertiary context, and a very strong commitment to research. You will have a strong record of research publications, and the capacity to make an immediate contribution to the established research excellence of the School, as well as a clear programme of anticipated research activity over the coming years.The School is committed to the integration of the biblical and theological disciplines, and you will be highly motivated to work closely with colleagues across the range of Divinity’s activities. You will be interested in the history of theology, and may have a research background in any major area of classical or modern theology. However, you must also have demonstrable expertise in dogmatics, and be interested in the exploration of constructive theology in a contemporary context. You will contribute to the School’s programmes in these areas at both undergraduate and taught postgraduate levels, and supervise research students. You will also undertake administrative duties as directed by the Head of School.Applications are invited for the post of Lecturer/Senior Lecturer/Reader in New Testament Studies in the School of Divinity, an internationally renowned centre of excellence. All applicants must have appropriate academic qualifications in New Testament Studies, including an awarded PhD and excellent language skills. Relative to the level of appointment sought, you will have appropriate experience of successful teaching, assessment and supervision of students in a tertiary context, and an ability to teach in a range of core areas in New Testament Studies. You will have a very strong commitment to research, with a suitable record of research publications and the capacity to make an immediate contribution to the established research excellence of the School. You will have a clear programme of anticipated research activity over the coming years.Applications will be accepted from candidates with a background in any major area of New Testament Studies, but preference will be shown to applicants who complement the School’s existing strengths. The School is firmly committed to the integration of the biblical and theological disciplines, and you will be highly motivated to work closely with colleagues across the range of Divinity’s activities. You will contribute to the School’s programmes at both undergraduate and taught postgraduate levels, and supervise research students. You will also undertake administrative duties as directed by the Head of School.
Saturday, 6 April 2013
Book Review: Doxological Theology [6]
Christopher
C. Green, Doxological Theology: Karl Barth on Divine Providence, Evil, and the Angels. T&T Clark Studies in
Systematic Theology, Vol. 13 (T&T Clark: London, 2011)
7. § 50, God and
Nothingness
Barth
is rather confusing in his discussion of das
Nichtige. On the one hand, Barth argues that das Nichtige has been totally defeated; there is no sense in which das Nichtige has any bearing on created
reality. But on the other, Barth also appears to admit that das Nichtige continues to hold sway over
created reality. How can these contradictory claims be overcome? In this
seventh chapter of Doxological Theology,
Green offers a framework for interpreting Barth, a framework that finds its
origin within Barth’s distinction between the material and formal offices of
Christ.
According
to Barth, our knowledge of das Nichtige
or the Nihil comes through our
knowledge of its nullification on the cross of Christ. Consequently, any issues
pertaining to das Nichtige can only
be discussed from within the context of a creature’s de facto participation in Christ. Those who praise God in Christ are
attuned through prayer to recognise the victory of God in Christ on the cross,
whereas those who do not praise God – that is, those who examine the so-called
problem of evil from a de jure
participation in Christ – can only construct a theodicy that assumes a
mechanical causality between sin and evil. On this latter account, the cause of
sin or evil must either be Pelagian in orientation (because people bring evil
on themselves) or Manichean (evil has a higher, metaphysical cause).
But
given that das Nichtige has been
cancelled by the cross, and given that Barth has claimed that the Nihil no longer exists in any sense, how
should we assess the seriousness with which Barth continues to regard das Nichtige? Green argues that this is
where Barth’s distinction between Christ’s material and formal offices comes
into play. From the perspective of Christ’s material offices – that is, his
kingly and priestly offices – God in Christ has completely cancelled das Nichtige. Christ reigns as Lord of
all, and there is no threat to his lordship, no pretender to his throne. And
for this reason, the Christian can be joyful. But das Nichtige still has a place when viewed from the perspective of
Christ’s formal office – that is, when viewed from the perspective of Christ’s
prophetic office. In this context, the Nihil
hinders creatures from accepting the sovereignty of God in Christ, and
continues to be an issue.
Of
course, this is somewhat paradoxical: the Nihil
hinders creatures from accepting that Christ has defeated the Nihil. But Green points out that Barth’s
theology here is highly rhetorical and stems from faithfulness to the object of
faith, rather than from a need to outline a coherent theology of the matter.
Moreover, the ‘triumphal rhetoric’ (John McDowell) of Christ’s kingly and
priestly offices, and the seriousness of das
Nichtige under Christ’s prophetic office, are incomprehensibly held
together as one perspective by the
Spirit. On this basis, the coherence of Barth’s account of das Nichtige stems from the Christian’s actual, prayerful
participation in Christ rather than from the depths of the confused human mind.
If
this is so, Barth requires his readers to accept contradictory statements when
it comes to the matter of God’s providence and the Nihil. Green puts it this way: ‘If theology is to partake in the
clarity that comes from obedience, it must reflect this reality in its own
language, even if that means making statements that are apparently
contradictory.’ (Doxological Theology,
p. 177). I dare say that not everyone will be satisfied by Barth’s position,
even if they are convinced by Green’s analysis of Barth.
Friday, 5 April 2013
Friday, 29 March 2013
As Old as Protestantism? A Timeline for Open Theism
A timeline for Open Theism is available here, with commentary from Greg Boyd (presumably) on the ReKnew website. Here is part of the commentary that is sure (possibly!) to cause a little controversy (perhaps).
Is Boyd overstating the case, or does he have a point? As the ReKnew blog does not appear to allow comments, feel free to use this blog to argue for or against this claim (and boost my traffic in the process, of course).
More importantly, this chart demonstrates that the open view is just about as old as Protestantism is! It can therefore no more be dismissed as an innovation than can Lutheranism, Calvinism or any other expression of the Protestant faith.
Is Boyd overstating the case, or does he have a point? As the ReKnew blog does not appear to allow comments, feel free to use this blog to argue for or against this claim (and boost my traffic in the process, of course).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


