By William Burt Pope, D.D.,
PROVIDENCE The Several Persons of the Trinity, and the Divine Attributes in Relation to this Doctrine PROVIDENTIAL CONSERVATION AND THEORIES The Triune God of Creation is the God also of Providence. This term, in its widest meaning, signifies the Divine presence in the world as sustaining, controlling, and guiding to their destination all things that are made. The will of God determines the end for which all orders of creaturely being exist. His Wisdom and His Goodness appoint the infinite variety of means by which that one end is attained: in the Conservation of the frame of nature, both spiritual and material; in the Care of all creatures that are the subjects of want; in the Government especially of intelligent and probationary beings. And His Power insures the accomplishment of every design or end for which they exist. The doctrine of Providence may be studied, therefore, in its connection with the Divine Being and the Divine attributes; then in relation to the objects and characteristics of its exercise. God absolutely, and God in the Trinity of Persons, is the God of Providence. While His Wisdom and His Power are especially exhibited, it is only by connecting Providence with all the Divine attributes which have been seen to be related to the creature that we can form a true conception of its range. GOD. Scripture furnishes all the elements of the doctrine in its relation to God; and this is its only method of teaching it. In collecting the substance of that teaching we must of necessity repeat much of what the preceding sections have enlarged upon; and also omit much of what they have anticipated. 1. The God of revelation is represented, generally, as at once present IN universal creaturely existence, as presiding OVER it, and as accomplishing THROUGH it His own designs. The combination of these three elements both explains the doctrine and defends it.2. Pantheism takes the first to be the only truth: the universe is one ever-varying manifestation of one substance which is God. But by the idea of Providence that notion of God in the world is excluded. The Creator is a Personal Being Who has a design and carries it on through all the processes of nature. In philosophical language this is expressed by the term TRANSCENDENCE. The language of Scripture simply attributes to the Supreme an end which He keeps ever in view in the relation to Himself of all things that exist. This is the leading idea in the word PROVIDENCE, which in its derivation connotes the following conceptions, all present in the New Testament. To God is ascribed pronoia, or what, speaking after the manner of men, is making PROVISION for the accomplishment of a PURPOSE or prothesis; and, as purpose and accomplishment are one to the Divine knowledge, His provision and plan are one with His prognosis, or foreknowledge. Whatever else the word includes, this is its first meaning: the system of things as under Providence, that is, the supervision of a Being Who is using it for an end.For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, eis auton, are all things. 1 This is a truth to be adored rather than discussed. In each of the three conceptions of the Supreme there is unfathomable mystery. That He is IN the universal creature with its evil and good; that He can be OVER it, as if in a personality like, ours marked off from what is God Himself; that the Absolute can use means: all these are thoughts with which Biblical terms make us as familiar as with OUR FATHER. But no thinking of ours can comprehend them.1 Rom. 11:36. 3. The ancient Epicurean notion, unconsciously represented by much modern Theistic speculation, erred in the opposite direction. It adopts the second and third of their principles, but at the expense of the first. God is over the creature, and acts through it, but not as being in it. This conception of the Divine Being is also and equally precluded by our doctrine of Providence. As the Creator makes the universe an instrument for the accomplishment of a purpose, He watches its operation, and is intimately present to all its processes and developments. It needs His omnipotence for its conservation in being; and not less His omnipotence and wisdom to adjust everywhere and always the relations of its organic laws to the laws of life, and both to the laws of spiritual existence. This presence of the Eternal at the root of the elements of creaturely existence is termed in philosophy IMMANENCE, as opposed to or combined with Transcendence. The Scripture says, in the language of the Creator: Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off?. . .Do not I fill heaven and earth? saith the Lord; 1 and, in the language of His creature: In Him we live, and move, and have our being.21 Jer. 23:23,24; 2 Acts 17:28.4. The Divine apostrophe in Jeremiah, wherein the Supreme claims to be at once far from every creature and very near to it, is of great importance in any philosophical view of Divine Providence. It gives the true doctrine in regard to its bearing on the widest relations of the creature to God, suggesting the union of the two ideas of immanence and transcendence. God is present to all things, to every physical force in its operation, to that higher than physical force which is life, to that life which man has more abundantly than the beasts which perish, to every movement of the free mind of man originating its own thoughts, as the FIRST CAUSE: not the first in the order of priority only; first also in the order of efficiency. This is the true Immanence. But God is present through SECOND CAUSES, to the operation of which, as the established laws of physical, mental, and spiritual nature, He has consigned the universe. This is His true Transcendence. The order of Divine Providence blends with infinite ease the two theories between which human philosophy finds it necessary to fix an impassable gulf. The mystery of the relation between the almighty, ever-present efficiency of God and the imparted quasi-independent forces of nature and of will, is not to be solved by any faculty of man. A multitude of hypotheses have been devised to bridge over that gulf, and bring the infinite into contact with all the finite. Some of these have been already mentioned under the high-sounding names of Pre-established Harmony, Plastic Medium, Emanations, and so forth. They serve little purpose in an inquiry which is interdicted to every created intelligence. No investigation has brought us nearer to the secret of the action of mind on body in our own constitution; and this is an ever-present illustration of the futility of that other attempt.Something but not much is gained by the invention of the term CONCURSUS, to signify the concurrence or co-operation of the Divine Power with all subordinate powers according to the pre-established laws of their operation. It is certain that God does not use His creation simply and only and absolutely as a mere instrument of His own direct energy.He does not make anything immediately dependent on Himself: no attribute of Absolute Sovereignty presides over either nature or grace. When the Omnipresent Controller of all dispenses with second causes in either of these departments He makes a NEW THING: in the former department that of nature, it is called MIRACLE; and supposing it to occur in the latter, it is Miracle whether so called or not. The delegation to second causes never can shut out the First. They cannot rest without Him, but He may dispense with them.The Providence of God is in all its acts and offices attributed to the several Persons of the Holy Trinity respectively. 1. My Father worketh hitherto: 1 these words might be understood as referring to that universal activity of God in the universe, and especially in this world, which is generally assigned to the Father to distinguish it from the special work of the Son in redemption.The Creator rested from His works: but He continues His work in Providence: that is, in the never-failing control, direction, and guidance of all the forces of nature and the free volitions of men. The long Divine Sabbath has been and still is, and will be to the end, filled up with the ceaseless activity of perfect rest, with the perfect rest of ceaseless activity: not indeed through a continuous creation, but by a continuous sustentation of what has been created. When our Lord goes on to say, I WORK, He tells us, first, that there never has been any Providence of the Father from which He has been excluded; secondly, that the time had come for a special delegation of the government of things to the Son Incarnate; and, thirdly, that, as the Father had, humanly speaking, broken in upon the rest of the long Sabbath by the working of miracles, so also the Son in like manner goes out of the ordinary operation of nature on the present occasion. But it must be remembered that the term Providence is still in the language of religion appropriated to God generally: that is, to the Father. Without making any formal distinction, we understand by it that underlying or overarching or all-pervading presence and care which has reference to the well-being of man rather as a creature than as a redeemed creature. In this sense we speak of the GOOD PROVIDENCE OF GOD. The Lord's Prayer keeps this ever before our minds. It addresses Our Father Which art in heaven, 2 and asks Him for the daily bread of our common life, the trespasses of which are forgiven, and from the evil of which we are delivered, in the economy of redemption. It is an instance, and a very high one, of the conventional use of terms in theology, that the word Providence is employed to designate the presence of God among His creatures in the widest sense.1 John 5:17; 2 Mat. 6:9. 2. There is a Providence, however, which is the especial department of the Son Incarnate, and is bound up with the Kingly office of His mediatorial work. It was inaugurated, so to speak, by the stupendous miraculous interventions that make up the incarnate manifestation and atoning work of Christ as sealed in His resurrection and ascension. Between the resurrection and the ascension we hear the great saying which unites them: All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth. 1 These words explain the earlier declaration of our Lord, All things are delivered unto Me of My Father: 2 spoken not only of the mysteries of knowledge to be imparted, but of the universal power which should be His. The later testimonies of the Apostles are abundant on this subject.One may be quoted, which is remarkable as combining the Providential preservation and dominion of the pre-temporal Son with that of the Son Incarnate: Whom He hath appointed heir of all things; by Whom also He made the worlds; Who, being the effulgence of His glory, and the very image of His substance, and upholding all things by the word of His power. 3 This government of the Son is not usually in Scripture or in dogmatic theology called Providence, but all that the word imports is included in the authority vested in Him Who is Head over all things to the church. 4 Indeed, in the unity of the Holy Trinity the mediatorial sway of Christ is still the Providence of the Father; and in heaven also our Lord may say: My Father worketh hitherto, and I work. 5 What is specifically His economical direction of the universe will be laid down at the last day.1 Mat. 28:18; 2 Mat. 11:27; 3 Heb. 1:2,3; 4 Eph. 1:22; 5 Luke 5:17. 3. The Holy Ghost is also the God of Providence, and in two senses. In the unity of the Father and the Son He has—to speak after the manner of men—co-operated from the beginning in all acts of Providential administration. It is not the mere language of metaphor that said: Thou sendest forth Thy Spirit, they are created: and Thou renewest the face of the earth: the beginning and the continuance of all things are ascribed to the Third Person of the Holy Trinity, and we may safely regard Him as the Lord and Giver of life throughout the universe: the Direct Efficient who connects the unseen with the seen in the whole economy of things. But the Holy Ghost is specially the God of Christian Providence, as sent forth to accomplish the will of God and of His Christ in that department of it which is supreme: the Administration of Redemption whether in its preparatory stages or in its complete fulfillment. As it respects both the Church and the individual believer the Spirit of Christ is the very Hand of Providence from the day of Pentecost and the Ethiopian at Gaza downwards through all the experiences of Christian history. In all the processes of salvation, preceding, accompanying, following conversion, He is the Christian's Providence. But, as the government of the Son is not generally so termed, neither is the administration of the Spirit. The word, as we have seen, is conventionally appropriated to God or the Father. 4. Though the precision of theology requires these economical distinctions in the Holy Trinity of Providence, it must always be remembered that GOD is ONE. What is said concerning the special gifts of the Christian Ministry may be applied to the whole subject we are here considering. Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. And there are diversities of ministrations, but the same Lord. And there are diversities of operations, but it is the same God Which worketh all in all. 1 The diversities of operation are real, and pervade the mediatorial economy, as will be hereafter more fully seen. But there is one Triune God of Providence; and the coming end, when God shall be all in all,2 will be only the great and final demonstration of a truth that already is assured to Christian faith.1 1 Cor. 12:4-6; 2 1 Cor. 15:28. The theological doctrine of Providence introduces the Attributes of God generally and particularly. I. In its more limited meaning, —that in which the specific doctrine of Providence touches creation and redemption, but is independent of both and includes neither, —it is the sphere of those attributes which are related to the creature as such, and of which we may reverently say that they owe their existence in our thoughts to the creature. And the right understanding of the doctrine—not to speak of the solution of its mysteries— depends on the union and harmony of these attributes in every view of it. Sometimes, for instance, the Omniscience and Omnipotence of the Creator are placed under a supposed attribute of Absolute Sovereignty; and then Providence is only Christianized Fatalism. The Knowledge that foresees and the Will that determines and the Power that executes are not distinguished; and there is no room left for the boundless display of what the Supreme is pleased to term His Wisdom. It avails not to say that to the Divine Mind all space is HERE and all time is NOW: all things being viewed as projected and accomplished at once. This cannot be denied, for God is the Absolute and dwelleth in eternity. But in His eternity He gives birth to time and all its succession and contingency.We cannot reach this mystery; we must bow down before it. It should suffice us that the same Word on which we depend for all our knowledge tells us that the Infinite descends to finite succession in the process of His works, and makes space a reality in which to carry them out: He seeth the end from the beginning. If Providence is taken in its widest meaning, as including all the ways of God with man, then we are bound to regard it as the sphere in which those other attributes are manifested which in human language, and with human meaning too, are called Love, and Righteousness, and Faithfulness. If we give all the revealed Divine perfections their equal homage, Providence is no other than the purpose of infinite Love using with almighty Power the means which unfailing Wisdom ordains. If this definition is rejected by transcendental theological philosophy we make our appeal to Him from Whose words we derive it. II. This equal tribute to the Divine attributes will secure at once the unity and the distinction between the GENERAL and the SPECIAL Providence of God.1. As He is present everywhere in His infinite power, all providential relation must be minute and special: to think otherwise of the Divine control of the laws of nature and the actions of men is inconsistent with the first principles of the doctrine. This is the glory of the Scriptural teaching, that it knows nothing of a Divine general care which does not descend to the minutest particulars. All general Providence must needs be special also. The ancient Epicureans thought that the gods were either indifferent to human affairs or limited their care to the more important interests of their creatures: " Magna dii curant, parva neglignnt." From the beginning of Scripture to the end the presence and. influence of God are brought into the most immediate relation with all things and all events. Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing? and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear ye not therefore; ye are of more value than many sparrows.
1
1 Mat. 10:29-31.
2.
3. The only method, lastly, by which we can deal with
On the left hand where He doth work but I cannot behold Him: He
hideth Himself on the
right hand that I cannot see Him. But He knoweth the way that I
take.
Another view of the doctrine presents to our study the range
over which Providence
extends; and the consideration of this will confirm, supplement,
and illustrate what has
been already said. First, the Universe as such is the object of
what may be termed
Conservation. Secondly, that part of it which is the subject of
creaturely wants is the
object of ceaseless providential Care. Thirdly, that more select
and highest portion which
consists of probationary beings is the object of Providential
Government.
Here we have Divine Providence in the centre of three widening
circles; or, to put it in
another form, there is in the sphere of its objects both a
descending and an ascending
scale. The Universe, as the universal all in one, includes in
its vast extent the sum of
creatures in their very nature needy and dependent, and within
this sphere there is a very
much more limited range of probationary beings: this is from the
wider to the more
limited. But we pass from the sum of things as such
Providence over the universe is the
1. Hence it is not a
If, in the reference to the Providential conservation of all
things by the Son, the Word of
His power
2. The hypothesis of CONCURSUS, so far as it is amenable to
definition, tends to the
same issue: it is only the shadow of the former; disguising
under the term Concursus the
idea of such a co-operation between the First Cause and second
causes as makes the
resultant action equally that of God and that of the immediate
agent. Outside of the
sphere of moral action we may hold what the Lutheran Quenstedt
thus formulates: Non
est reipsa alia actio influxus Dei, alia operatio creaturae, sed
una et indivisi-bilis actio.
Quemadmodum eadem numero scriptio pendet a manu et calamo, nee
pars una a manu et
alia a calamo, sed tota a manu et tota a calamo : ita concursus
Dei non est prior actione
creaturae propria prioritate causalitatis, cum in re sit omnino
eadem actio. But, however
true this is, and however easy to understand, as to all
functions of the reasonable creature
which are outside of the sphere of others, it is hard either to
understand or to apply it
when the distinction of virtue and vice enters.
3. There is but a step between this doctrine and that which
asserts the
4. The only safeguard against these incomprehensible hypotheses
is the firm assurance
that the Divine Author of all things permits us to regard Him as
co-operating with the
forces to which He has given a real though not independent
existence. He is pleased to
accommodate His infinite presence and operation to the laws
which He has established,
concurring with them according to their nature: with free
agencies as Himself free, and
with those that work necessarily as guiding their necessary
action. But it is only with the
movements of free intelligence that He is said to co-operate:
the word sonergin is strictly
limited to this, and suggests a most important distinction. No
efforts of the human mind
can go beyond this acknowledgment of a mystery that cannot be
solved.
5. But the purpose of this co-operation must ever be kept in
view. It is not merely the
upholding of created nature: the end for which all things are
what they are, is inseparably
bound up with the term Providence, and alone justifies its
application to the Divine supervision
and control of the universe. It may be said of all created
things that they
Providential
1. It may be said that the Creator's care over the lower orders,
or His. Providence, extends
far beyond the animal world, and passes over that mysterious
frontier line, if there be
such a line, where animal passes downward into vegetable life,
or the distinction between
them ceases to exist. As soon as the life-cell breaks the dead
monotony of the creation,
the care of the Supreme is wanted to provide for its expansion
into its predestined forms.
Everywhere reigns the law of Selection, not natural but
supernatural. The Disposer of all
things appoints the ten thousand contrivances by which the
plants find out their
appropriate soil, and even allure and devour their insect and
animal prey. In this domain,
as well as in that of the beasts which perish, and of man that
perishes not, the word holds
good: He hath determined
their appointed seasons and the bounds of their habitation.
'Shall not the Judge of all the earth
1 Acts 17:26;
2 Mat.
10:29-31; 3
Mat. 6:26;
4 Job
12:10; 5
Psa 114:9;
6 Psa.
104:21; 7
Gen.
18:25.
2. As the creature for whom the earth was formed, Man is
specially the object of that care
of which we speak. The human race, that is; concerning which it
is affirmed by St. Paul
that God determined their
appointed seasons and the bounds of their habitation.
Men generally, both good and evil, are equally its objects:
He maketh His sun to rise on
the evil and the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the
unjust.
Finally, our Lord has added elsewhere this, that in the specific
allotments of men's
conditions of life there is mystery which He not only does not
solve Himself, but forbids
us to pry into: Neither
hath this man sinned, nor his parents: but that the works of God
should be made manifest in him.
Providential
1. The moral government of God is, by the very terms, exercised
over beings free and
consciously responsible for the use of their freedom. It is
sufficient to appeal to the
consciousness of the spirit in man which asserts its own
origination of the movements of
will, that is of its own acts; and, in the form of conscience,
or moral consciousness,
proclaims universally its sense of obligation and responsibility
to a supreme moral
Governor. On any other theory the word Providence loses the
better part of its meaning:
part indeed it may retain in the form of predestination, the
unbending government of a
soul that must act out its destiny; but all that belongs to the
administration of law as a
means of discipline and education for the human spirit on its
way to the highest
perfection, which is necessary obedience in perfect liberty, is
taken from it.
2. It is only another way of presenting the same truth to say
that the Providence of
government is exercised only over beings in a state of
probation. Over those who are
fixed in their eternal estate there may be a Divine rule, in a
limited sense, but there is no
Providence in the strict meaning of the word. They are
instruments of that Providence,
and are themselves bound up with a scheme which includes them in
common with all
orders of creation in its ultimate designs: but they are not
objects of that all-wise
adjustment of means to ends, and of that rectoral supervision of
free volitions and acts,
which are connoted in the term. Hence, the most impressive view
that may be taken of
this doctrine regards it as the slow but sure guidance of all
creatures whose state is not yet
eternally fixed to the consummation of their destiny as
foreappointed of God.
3. It follows that theology has no doctrine on this subject
which does not connect it with
sin and redemption: not with the one without the other, but with
both. Strictly speaking,
the whole of revelation is the history of the dealings of God
with Sinners redeemed: we
cannot, therefore, dissociate the term Providence, which is a
name for that history, from
the idea of provision to meet a foreseen, permitted, restrained,
condemned, and
vanquished, though not eternally abolished, evil.
(1.) Sin, or the separation of the created will from the will of
God, was foreseen by the
Creator. This first great and awful truth involved in the word
Providence, as it has been
defined, lies at the threshold of all theology as an
unquestioned and unfathomable fact.
But this is equivalent to saying that it was permitted: in other
words, that no Divine
restraint was laid upon the freedom of the creature in that
possibility of its direction
which was towards departure from God. "Deus quidem permittit,
sed non vult to
(2.) Providence is the history of Divine dealings with men as
fallen and restored. The
relation of the idea of
pronoia to the counteraction of evil needs only to be indicated: the
specific doctrines of Sin and Redemption will require fuller
treatment of what is here
only suggested. The government of the world from the beginning
has been conducted on
the basis of a Divine scheme, the evolution of which has been so
interwoven with the
development of the sinning race as to make the history of
mankind one great display of
the wisdom and forethought of what we call Providence:
foreappointment or prothesis
presiding over the beginning of all things, foreknowledge
presiding over the end, and
Providence between these as their union. This is impressively
set before us under twoaspects:
with reference to the coming of Christ and the preparation of
the world for His
coming, and the provisional forbearance of Divine righteousness
in the prospect of the
atoning sacrifice. As to-the former, let these sentences of
Scripture be instead, of any
further enlargement. And
Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah-Jireh: as it is
said to this day, in the mount of the Lord it shall be seen.
In the prevision of this provision the peoples were governed in
forbearance during the
long ages of their darkness and errors. The wickedness of
mankind has been marked,
controlled, and punished by stern visitations, on the one hand;
on the other, there has
been manifested a Divine forbearance in reference to which St.
Paul says that the times of
this ignorance God winked at:
1
(3.) Certain general principles there are which serve to protect
ns from error, though they
still leave the clouds and darkness round the throne of the
Divine Ruler. Evidence is
abundantly given on all sides that sin is opposed to the will of
the Supreme Controller of
events. Not only is there an abiding remembrancer of this in
conscience; it is also
confirmed by the judgment of mankind interpreting history. Sin
is for ever bound up with
evil; and, whatever triumphs may be permitted to the cause of
iniquity—so that men go
so far as recklessly to call evil good and good evil— no
reasonable mind ever yet doubted
that the course of things is utterly opposed to wrong of every
kind, and steadfastly in
favor of righteousness. Even Manichaeism, at least in its more
ancient forms, tended to
the admission of a final triumph of the good: it never
contemplated evil as eternally
rooted in nature, and triumphant against its opposite. Again, it
must not be doubted that
Divine Providence uses evil for the accomplishment of His
purposes. It derogates from
His dignity to suppose that He would permit sin to coexist with
goodness, and be
everywhere diffused around and within His kingdom, without
subserving His designs.
Surely the wrath of man shall praise Thee is the striking
expression of an eternal truth; as
is also that other, the
remainder of wrath shalt Thou restrain!
1
A few general observations are still necessary to complete this
view of Providence. It is
obviously the most comprehensive term in the language of
theology: the background,
mysterious in its brightness or darkness, of all the several
departments of religious truth.
Rather, it penetrates and fills the whole compass of the
relations of man with his Maker.
It connects the Unseen God with the visible creation, and the
visible creation with the
work of redemption, and redemption with personal salvation, and
personal salvation with
the end of all things. There is no topic which has already been
discussed, none which
awaits discussion, that does not pay its tribute to the
all-embracing, all-surrounding:
doctrine of Providence. The word itself—let it be once more
impressed—in one aspect of
it carries our thoughts up to that supreme Purpose which was in
the beginning with God,
and in another carries our thoughts down to the foreseen End or
consummation of all
things; while it includes between these the whole infinite
variety of the dealings of God
with man. It silently accompanies theology therefore into all
its regions of study and
meditation; touches it literally at every point, and sheds its
glory, oppressive to reason but
invigorating to faith, over all branches of its investigation.
It ought to be the grand
Reconciler of the contending advocates of predestination and
conditional election. The
former claim and must have all the legitimate rights of the
prothesis; the latter should not
be defrauded of the rights of the prognosis; while both must rejoice in the
pronoia that
comes between. All theological truths are rounded by this
unfathomable word. But for the
very reason that it is, in its widest compass, so literally
boundless and universal, we find
it necessary to give it only a scanty treatment as one distinct
department. |
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END OF VOL. I. |