By William Burt Pope, D.D.,
THE MEDIATORIAL MINISTRY.
PRELIMINARY. THE most appropriate superscription of the department of Theology on which we now enter is THE MEDIATORIAL MINISTRY. This term defines the relation of our Savior’s Person to God and man, separated by human sin: as it is expressed in the word Mediatorial. It embraces also the whole compass of our Saviour's work on earth and in heaven: this is better described by the Lord's own word, Ministry, than by any other. A thorough survey of the subject includes, first, the historical development of the Divine eternal counsel of Redemption as exhibited in a series of dispensations or covenants of which Christ, whether unrevealed or revealed, is the sole Mediator. Secondly, it presents to us the full manifestation of the Mediatorial Trinity: the several functions and relations of the Three Persons in the incarnation and redeeming work. This leads, thirdly, to the Person of Christ as the Mediator, whose Divine personality continues in His assumption of human nature and gives its perfection to all that He does and suffers for mankind. Fourthly, what our Lord accomplished once for all, and is still accomplishing, must be viewed in its historical process through a succession of redeeming states and offices. Fifthly, we close with the study of the Finished Work of His objective mediatorial ministry as distinguished from the subjective application of it in the individual and in the Church through the Holy Ghost. In discussing these topics, the very fundamentals of the Gospel, we must adhere rigidly to the revelations of Scripture. But, in this as in other departments, and perhaps more than most others, it will be necessary as we proceed to study the ecclesiastical development side by side with the Scriptural. THE DIVINE PURPOSE. We cannot approach the accomplished work of redemption save through the eternal counsel from which it sprang, and the successive dispensations which connected it with that eternal purpose. Before the world existed Christ was ordained to take human nature in order to its renewal; not therefore as a necessary incarnation for the perfecting of the idea of humanity apart from sin. The mystery of the Divine counsel has been gradually unfolded through a series of economies, which occupied the times of preparation for the Gospel. These may be viewed under two aspects. First, the whole world of mankind has been dealt with according to the terms of a covenant dating from the Fall, but not yet fully revealed: a covenant of grace given as a simple promise to our first parents, renewed to Noah, and once more ratified to Abraham, as each the representative of mankind. This may be called the economy of the Gentiles inasmuch as the world was undergoing a negative preliminary discipline for Christ, the Desire of the nations, and at the same time enjoying a certain measure of benefit from His mediation. Secondly, a series of positive dispensations or covenants were given supernaturally to a chosen people, in which the coming Redeemer was foreshadowed and prepared for: in the Mosaic covenant as the law with its expiations, and as prophecy with its Gospel promise. Both the law and the prophets of the Mosaic economy incorporated and carried on the older promise or decree of redemption until the fullness of time when Christ blended all into the unity of the new covenant. Redemption is in the New Testament declared to have been a purpose of God in or from eternity. This design, having reference solely to the Saviour's work, and apart from its application by the Spirit, is regarded in Scripture as an absolute decree of man's salvation virtually accomplished from the beginning: a mystery reserved for gradual revelation, but a reality underlying all human history. 1. By many various terms is the original design of man's salvation set forth. Love is in the van and in the rear of the long array. God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son: 1 here outo and oste mark the design of love as accomplished in the mission of the Only-begotten. 2 That love is viewed as the spontaneous, absolute, decretive will of God: neither taking counsel nor giving account outside of Himself. The counsel of His own will 3 is simply the decree of His supreme volition: the bouleen is the expression of the Theleema; it represents our redemption as the primitive norm or rule according to which God worketh all things, rather than as a scheme or expedient itself evolved in the Divine mind. Those passages which are sometimes quoted in the latter sense refer to the gradual evolution of the heavenly counsel, the conditions on which personal salvation is suspended, and the methods of the Spirit's administration. In regard to these, there is certainly a plan of Salvation, but not so strictly a plan of Redemption: the latter is as simply a fiat of will as creation: Lo, I come to do Thy will, 0 God.4
1 John 3:16;
2
1 John 4:10;2:7;
3
Eph. 1:11;
4
Heb. 10:9.
2. This decree had its effect in itself and was
virtually accomplished: we cannot say from
the time of its origination, for it was not a project of
time. The fall of the world and its
recovery were never separated. The history of mankind is
a history of redemption. The
Lamb was
Man has no history apart from Him.
The Decree was, however, a mystery slowly revealed, and
in a variety of ways: by
gradual prophecy and gradual preparation, both of which
assumed the form of a series of
covenants, or covenant economies.
1. The eternal purpose was preserved in the remembrance
and hope of mankind by
constant
2. There was also a continuous
3. The gradual development of the Divine counsel of
human salvation is in Scripture the
unfolding of a
(1.) The term itself bears a special Messianic meaning,
as always having in view the
fidelity of God to the design of human redemption
through the sacrifice of His Son. The
Hebrew
(2.) This covenant of redemption or of grace has been
always connected with Christ its
unrevealed Mediator. As its
1 Heb. 7:22;
2
Mal. 3:1;
3
Isa. 49:8;
4
Gal. 3:18,19,29.
(3.) This one Covenant has taken three forms in the
history of revelation, (i.) As entered
into with mankind, represented by Christ, its revelation
began with the Fall, was ratified
for the world with Noah, and was confirmed to Abraham,
as the representative of all
believers to the end of time, (ii.) But the covenant
with Abraham for the world in all ages
also introduced the special compact with his descendants
after the flesh. This latter was
established through Moses its mediator; and blended the
covenant of grace with a
covenant of works.
(4.) This one institute of mercy, as progressively
revealed, distributes the history of
revelation under a series of
The Divine Purpose was fulfilled in the Mission of
Christ, including His incarnation and
death: the Decree, that is, of the redemption of the
world. This fulfillment is the fullness
of time; its consummate secret being the ratification of
the new and better covenant: new,
in contradistinction to the old which was in its final
form limited to one people; and
better, because revealing all the provisions of grace,
for time and eternity, in Christ the
Mediator made perfect, on behalf of the entire race of
mankind.
1. Our Lord's advent introduced the
The
2. It must be remembered, however, that this fulfillment
refers only to the objective work
of redemption. The great purpose was accomplished, and
the Divine counsel exhausted,
in the
1 Eph. 6:19;
2
Eph. 3:4,9;
3
Col. 2:2;
4
1 Pet. 1:12.
3. It is also true that the purpose still runs on,
waiting for another accomplishment, which
connects it with the Spirit's work in the administration of redemption.
Often the
accomplished purpose of human salvation is confounded
with the final realization of all
the Divine Plans. We must endeavor to keep these two
distinct. The language of the New
Testament when speaking of the actualization of the
Divine decree in the mission of
Christ is different from that which is used concerning
the gradual fulfillment of other
purposes dependent upon that. However difficult it may
be to make the distinction it is
necessary. The processes of the gradual administration
of grace will issue in the salvation
of a certain portion of mankind,
Whereas of the redemption of man's race or mankind, that
is, of all who have ever borne
or shall ever bear the name' of man, the Scripture
speaks in definitive terms as having
been once for all accomplished.
1 Eph. 1:4;
2
1 John 4:14.
1. The Nicene Creed expresses the sentiment of the first
Christians, that Jesus Christ was
incarnate
2. The early Church held fast the universality of the
object of the redeeming purpose.
From the Apostolical Fathers downwards there is a clear
testimony. " Ideo autem passus
est, ut tolleret peccatum mundi. Si quis autem non
credit in Christum, generali beneficio
se fraudat." These words of Ambrose represent the strain
of ante-Nicene theology, which
knew nothing of a restriction in the Divine purpose of
salvation.
3. But his disciple Augustine did not follow his
teacher. He first laid down the principle
that God in His sovereignty decreed the separation of a
certain number from the mass of
fallen mankind unto salvation, including the special,
irresistible, and inadmissible grace
that leads to it: for them and for them alone He
provided and sent His Son. This view of
the eternal purpose was exaggerated by the followers of
Augustine; it gave rise to Pelagian and semi-Pelagian extravagance in the opposite
direction. Early Augustinianism
made grace dependent on the prodestination of its
object; semi-Pelagianism made grace
dependent on the Divine prevision of man's good use of
it. The Synod of Arausio rejected
both, and at the same time condemned " cum omni
detestatione," the doctrine of a
predestination to evil; and that of Chiercy (853) under
Hincmar spoke still more
decidedly. The ninth century was full of this
controversy, Gottschalk being the
representative of Augustine, and the link between him
and his still greater representative,
Calvin.
4. The Scholastic divines took opposite sides as to the
Divine decrees: Thomas of
Bradwardine, Archbishop of Canterbury (1349), and Wyclif
after him, prepared the way
for the rigorous doctrine which Calvin stamped with his
name. But the general tendency
of mediaeval doctrine was towards the universal
redemption which the Council of Trent
laid down, and from which the Greek Church had never
deviated.
5. Calvin carried the ancient theory of Augustine to its
logical conclusion: cadit homo
Dei providentia
6. The Remonstrants of Holland, or Arminians, were the
first who, in modern times,
protested against the Augustinianism which had found its
way into some of the
Formularies of the Reformation. Their principle was that
the decree of God in Christ was
in favor of mankind as such; and that that decree was
accomplished in the offering of
Christ for the redemption of the whole race. The
Lutheran Formularies, especially the
later, assert the same universality; as also do the
Methodists everywhere. Against this
Calvinism or Augustinianism urges that the decree of
redemption was in favor only of
those who are actually redeemed; that redemption in
purpose had not and could not have
reference to those who perish; and that, if general
appeals and exhortations are found in
the Word of God, this anomaly is to be explained by the
fact that there is a secret decree
behind the open declaration of the Divine Purpose.
7. It is obvious that inscrutable mystery rests upon
this whole subject. Its chief difficulty,
however, lies in the Scriptural application of the
doctrines of vocation and election in
their connection with general redemption. In other
words, while the eternal will of the
Love of God to provide a Deliverer and an atoning
deliverance adequate to meet the ruin
of mankind is placed beyond the possibility of doubt,
the revelation of the Bible thus
responding to the instinct of the human heart, it may
seem hard to reconcile such a
catholic purpose with the partial, progressive, and
limited announcements of that supreme
truth. But this branch of the subject has its
appropriate place hereafter; and it will receive
fuller treatment. |
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