They’ve all been reading a dreadful man
called Karl Barth, who seems the right opposite to Karl Marx. ‘Under judgement’
is their great expression. They all talk like Covenanters or Old Testament
prophets. They don’t think human reason or human conscience of any value at
all: they maintain, as stoutly as Calvin, that there’s no reason why God’s
dealings should appear just (let alone, merciful) to us: and they maintain the
doctrine that all our righteousness is filthy rags with a fierceness and sincerity which
is like a blow in the face.
On Calvinism. Both the statement that
our final destination is already settled and the view that it still may be
either Heaven or Hell, seem to me to imply the ultimate reality of Time, which
I don’t believe in. The controversy is one I can’t join on either side for I
think that in the real (Timeless) world it is meaningless.
All that Calvinist question—Free-Will
and Predestination, is to my mind undiscussable, insoluble. Of course (say us)
if a man repents God will accept him. Ah yes, (say they) but the fact of his repenting
shows that God has already moved him to do so. This at any rate leaves us with
the fact that in any concrete case the question never arrives as a practical one.
But I suspect it is really a meaningless question. The
difference between Freedom and Necessity is fairly clear on the bodily level:
we know the difference between making our teeth chatter on purpose and just finding
them chattering with cold. It begins to be less clear when we talk of human love
(leaving out the erotic kind). ‘Do I like him because I choose or because I
must?’—there are cases where this has an answer, but others where it seems to
me to mean nothing. When we carry it up to relations between God and Man, has
the distinction perhaps become nonsensical? After all, when we are most free,
it is only with a freedom God has given us: and when our will is most influenced
by Grace, it is still our will. And if what our
will does
is not ‘voluntary’, and if ‘voluntary’ does not mean ‘free’, what are we
talking about? I’d leave it all alone. Blessings.
The real interrelation
between God’s omnipotence and Man’s freedom is something we can’t find out.
Looking at the Sheep and the Goats every man can be quite sure that every kind
act he does will be accepted by Christ. Yet, equally, we all do feel sure that
all the good in us comes from Grace. We have to leave it at that. I find the
best plan is to take the Calvinist view of my own virtues and other people’s
vices: and the other view of my own vices and other people’s virtues. But
though there is much to be puzzled about, there is nothing to be worried about.
It is plain from Scripture that, in whatever sense the Pauline doctrine is
true, it is not true in any sense which excludes its (apparent) opposite. You
know what Luther said: ‘Do you doubt if you are chosen? Then say your prayers
and you may conclude that you are.’
Pilgrim’s
Progress, if you ignore some straw-splitting dialogues in Calvinist theology and
concentrate on the story, is first class.
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