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Woolsey, Andrew A. (1988) Unity and continuity in covenantal thought PDF

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Woolsey, Andrew A. (1988) Unity and continuity in covenantal thought: a study in the reformed tradition to the Westminster Assembly. PhD thesis. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/773/ Copyright and moral rights for this thesis are retained by the author A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Glasgow Theses Service http://theses.gla.ac.uk/ [email protected] urt i r A JD c crr rr 'i r r r y- r iT C C) VE 1\T.A )V T.A L. r1-tc U C? i-i T: A 5 T LTD r ri Tiq i p- c i MD I?AD I T1 C)11 rC) TI1 rIvII J TE I? A M13 L Y Andrew Alex8nder Woolsey VOLUME ONE A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy September, 1988 1988 Andrew A. Woolsey Scottish History Department University of Glasgow TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements Vol. I 3 Summary 4 PART ONE SETTING THE SCENE 1. Historical Background to The Westminster Assembly 8 2. Sources and Covenant Doctrine of The Westminster Standards 44 3. Historiography of Covenantal Thought: The Nineteenth Century 101 4. Ristoriography of Covenantal Thought: The Twentieth Century 129 PART TWO FORERUNNERS 5. The Covenant in the Church Fathers 200 6. The Covenant in Medieval Thought 230 7. The Covenant In the Early Reformers 255 PART THREE THE GENEVAN INFLUENCE 8. John Calvin: The Unity of the Covenant 313 9. : Covenant, Law, and Grace 343 10. : Covenantal Conditions Vol.11 3 11. : Covenant and Predestination 18 12. : Conclusion 41 13. Theodore Beza and the Covenant 50 PART FOUR POST-REFORMATION DEVELOPMENT 14. The Heidelberg Story: Zacharius Ursinus 114 15. Casper Olevianus 142 16. The Puritan Stream : Thomas Cartwright and Dudley Fenner 167 17. William Perkins I 90 18. The Scottish Connection: John Knox 238 19. Robert Rollock and Robert Howie 255 20. Conclusion 291 Abbreviations 308 Bibliography 310 -2- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The privilege of engaging in an extended period of research naturally involves a lot of people, without whose assistance such an undertaking would not be possible. The following work is no exception, and I wish here to acknowledge my indebtedness to many friends who have provided support and encouragement, and to several sources of help in particular. The provision of a Major Scottish Studentship Award made this research financially possible in the first place, and enabled us as a family to continue living with some degree of normality during the past three years. For this I am deeply grateful. Secondly, no words are adequate to express the debt I owe to my supervisor, Dr. James Kirk of the Scottish History Department. Dr. Kirk's gracious manner, his timely suggestions, personal kindness, and not least his constant encouragement during the times of 'heavy weather', all contributed enormously in bringing this work to completion. I also wish to record my thanks to the staff of the Scottish History Department and of Glasgow University Library, especially the Inter Library Loans and Special Collections Departments, for their patience with seemingly endless requirements, and for their persistence in tracking down numerous books and articles. A similar debt Is owed for assistance received from the staff at New College Library, the National Library, Edinburgh University Library, and St. Andrews University Library. Finally, to my own family, who, perhaps more than any others must have felt that 'much study is a weariness to the flesh', I owe the greatest debt of all. Whatever sacrifice they have been called to make (and they have not been few), and whatever 'bookish' moods they have had to endure, it has all been borne cheerfully and with scarcely a word of complaint. So it Is to my wife, Joan, and children, Ruth and Stephen - covenantal blessings indeed - that I gladly dedicate these volumes. 29th September, 1988. Scottish History Department, University of Glasgow, 9 University Gardens, Glasgow G12 8Q11 -3- SUMMARY The Westminster Assembly is a useful starting point for detailed discussion of the development of covenantal thought, particularly in view of the direction taken by recent studies which place a strong dichotomy between the early Reformers and their seventeenth-century successors, notably between John Calvin and those who have traditionally been designated 'Calvinists'. The most extreme, or virulent, of these is an unsparing attack upon the Westminster Confession as one of the principal reservoirs of 'a plague that had long infected the Reformed churches'. In seeking to overthrow what he described as 'the treasured confession of my mother church', the author made the astonishing claim, which puts this basic issue in a curious nutshell: 'It was Calvin who rescued me from the Calvinists'. And the deadly virus identified as the cause of this plague was the Confession's covenantal statements, of which it was said, 'Calvin knew nothing, for these theological innovations were the work of his successors'.1 In order to set the scene, therefore, Part One of the thesis has been devoted to a consideration of the background to the Westminster Assembly and its documents, an examination of the sources and content of the theology of the covenant expressed in the standards, and also a critical survey of the historiography of the covenant from around the middle of the last century to the present time. The historical background to the Assembly as it relates to both the English and Scottish churches Is designed to get the feel of the general ecclesiastical climate and theological orientation In which the divines and their immediate predecessors lived and moved, while the examination of sources and content more particularly identifies the direction from which the doctrine of the covenant came to be embodied in the Confession and Catechisms, and also the issues which are emphasized In, and Immediately related to, the chapters dealing specifically with the covenant. The scriptural origin of the Reformed doctrine of the covenant is Indisputable, so that serious research in this area has never been considered necessary. The temptation to include a section on Scripture in this study has likewise been resisted, but its importance has been kept In mind throughout. In order to demonstrate that the Idea of the covenant as held by the Reformed church, even in many of Its particular aspects, was no new thing, Part Two picks up some of the threads offered by forerunners in the field. These Include several of the church fathers, notably Augustine. The survival and use of the Idea in both its -4- political and theological applications during the medieval period has not been overlooked. It was found that the idea of the covenant had specific governmental, hermeneutical and soterlological functions in medieval thought which were by no means dspised or abandoned in the reaction of the Reformation against medieval scholasticism. Among the early reformers, Luther's theology held firmly to the basic concepts underlying covenantal theology, but it was in the Reformed camp that the importance of the doctrine was chiefly recognized and utilized in the controversies of the time, first by Oecolanipadius and Zwingli and then more distinctly by Bullinger, whose little monograph De Testamento seu foedere Del unico et aeterno was the first to appear on the subject. The findings of this research into Bullinger's work interact strongly with those studies which regard Bullinger's view of the covenant as strictly bilateral and consequently portray him as the founder of a separate Reformed tradition, distinct from that which emanated from Calvin and the Genevan school. Part Three is devoted entirely to Geneva, showing the seminal influence of Calvin's work in the development and transmission of covenantal thought. In demonstrating that the covenant in both its unilateral and bilateral aspects was an essential part of Calvin's overall theological structure, the disputed questions as to whether Calvin was a 'covenant theologian', and whether he taught a covenant of works is carefully considered in its proper theological context and not merely with respect to the use of terms. For the first time in any study of covenantal thought, detailed attention has been given in this research to the work of Theodore Beza. Beza has been consistently singled out by those who oppose the Calvinists to Calvin, as the guilty party in initiating a rigid, theocentric, supralapsarian, scholastic orthodoxy which diverged manifestly from Calvin's warm, Christocentric, humanistic, biblical theology. Tust as consistently he has been denied any interest in the theology of the covenant, with the result that 'covenant theology' has been interpreted as a reaction against Bezean orthodoxy in an effort to recover a place for responsible man in the economy of salvation. The evidence, however, supplied by a wider consultation of Beza's works than his merely controversial writings, supports a contrary argument. Beza's basic fidelity to Calvin becomes apparent in controverted areas and the warm heart of a concerned pastor is heard to beat in his sermonic material. More importantly f or this research, Beza is found to have a keen Interest in the covenant both unilaterally and bilaterally, particularly In relation to the doctrine of the union between Christ and his church, just as Calvin had before him and the Calvinists after him. -5- In the final part of the thesis the issues and arguments already raised are followed through in representative writers from three main interrelated locations of post-reformation development in Reformed theology. One is the influence of the Heidelberg theologians, Ursinus and Olevianus, In the Palatinate Church of Germany. The others are the English Puritan movement, dominated mainly by the influence of William Perkins, and the Scottish connection In the writings of Knox, Rollock and Howie. It is the conclusion of this research that while covenantal theology Inevitably underwent a process of refining and expansion, and was given fuller definition and varying emphases by later writers, that it nevertheless remained true to the central idea or ideas of the covenant as taught by the Reformers. Such a process cannot be construed as constituting a fundamental shift or departure from the theology of the early Reformers. Rather there Is a general agreement, a unity and continuity in the Reformed theology of the covenant which makes the Westminster divines In this respect the worthy successors of Calvin and his colleagues. Notes 1 H. Rolston III, John Calvin versus The Westminster Confession (Richmond, 1972), 5-6, 23. 2 J.W. Baker, Heinrich Bullinger and the Covenant: The Other Reformed Tradition, (Ohio, 1980), Is a recent example of this viewpoint. -6- PART ONE rrr xic TIIE C CHAPTER ONE Historical Background to The Westminster Assembly The original Intention in contemplating this research in the development of Reformed covenantal thought in the early seventeenth century was to concentrate on the Westminster Assembly (1643-49), with particular focus upon the representatives of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, 1 and the Importance of their contribution in the deliberations of that distinguished body, especially in the formulation of Its documents, the Westminster Standards.2 It soon became obvious, however, that the Confession of Faith and the Catechisms were gathering together in a clear, concise and comprehensive fashion the fruits of theological debate and development with roots going deep Into the sixteenth-century Reformation and beyond. For example, one not otherwise uncritical of the Confession, has commented that 'It marks the maturest and most deliberate formulation of the scheme of Biblical revelation as it appeared to the most cultured and the most devout Puritan minds. It was the last great creed-utterance of Calvinism, and intellectually and theologically it is a worthy child of the Institutes'. 3 Another has remarked that work done by the Westminster Assembly of Divines was 'the ablest and ripest product' of the Reformation of the sixteenth century.d Again the Confession has been described as 'an admirable summary of faith and practice', which lacked only In originality, for the simple reason that 'These later divines.. .availed themselves of the labours of the Reformation... Bullinger and Calvin, especially the latter. . . left them little to accomplish, except In the way of arrangement and compression'. From this perspective Westminster represented not so -8- much the central focus, much less the inauguration, of a theological era, but rather the culmination of a period of intense theological discussion and ecclesiastical feet- finding after the momentous upheaval of renaissance, reformation and revolution which had gripped Europe, and the implications of which were still being worked out in many countries, including England and Scotland. It represented rather 'the most complete and mature development of Reformed theology in creedal formu.G This is not to say that further theological development, particularly in covenantal thought, was stultified after the mid-seventeenth century, but the manner in which the Confession of Faith has remained for three centuries the subordinate standard of faith f or many branches of the Christian church, is ample evidence that some fairly substantial and conclusive statements had been made. 7 From another perspective, the Westminster Assembly can be viewed as the beginning of a remarkable period of religious stimulation and growth in the English-speaking world, which was not without its political significance also, and in which the idea of the covenant was to have a prominent place. The pursuit of various issues in covenantal thought, therefore, drove this research back into an earlier period of which the Westminster Assembly is roughly the cut-off point. In the process it inevitably widened the horizons beyond the Scottish scene to embrace the continental, English, and, to some extent, the New England churches in all the complexities and variety of their controversies and counsels. In the course of the study some discussion will be necessary regarding what constitutes 'covenant theology' or a covenantal theologian. It may be helpful at this stage, however, to indicate briefly a working definition of the concept as used in the following pages. Historians have tended to define 'covenant theology' with respect to the -9-

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Sep 29, 1988 both the English and Scottish churches Is designed to get the feel of the . seventeenth century', but had far-reaching effects for the always observe this rule, that there must be sobriety and . 41 Neal, History, vol.1, and B. Brook, Memoir of the Life Stockland and Th. Norton (tr
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