4D Religious concepts of free will, with reference to the teachings of Pelagius and Arminius Flashcards
Are free will and determinism compatible?
• Yes: the issue = to what extent is this compatibility w/ omnipotence balance/distributed btwn the two parameters of free will and det.?
- ∴ may find that Aug. + Arm. share more in common than Arm. + Pel.
Give an introduction to Pelagius.
- Ascetic monk
- “doctrines are the intervention of the human minds, as it tries to penetrate the mystery of God […] scripture itself is the work of human recording the example and teaching of Jesus.”
- “Thus, it is not what you believe (in your head) that matters; it is how you respond with your heart and your actions. It is not believing in Christ that matters, but becoming like him.”
What is Pelagius’ view of the role of original sin?
• Humans cannot take credit for their freedom to choose ∵ this is willed by G
- We can only do good ∵ G has allowed us to
• ∴ Adam’s sin only affected Adam - it is not inherited by humanity
- Adam and Eve = mature enough to receive the gift of free will ∴ mature enough to take responsibility for their actions
- Pel. ∴ rejects the doctrine of original sin
Explain Pelagius’ view that humans should mature in God’s image and accept the responsibility of free will.
• Gift of free will enabled Adam and Eve to choose whether or not to eat the fruit ∴ allowed the process maturity to begin in eating it
• Humans go through a learning process, and as they do, they grow + mature in wisdom
- Part of this learning process is defiance
• Laws of Moses = a reminder for humans, as a remedy for ignorance to their own nature that had the capacity to choose between good/evil
Explain Pelagius’ view of free will as used to follow God’s laws.
• Using free will to follow G’s laws = doing “good works” e.g. following commandments
- “No one knows better the true measure of our strength than He who has given it to us”
• Pel. have examples of ppl from OT who had used their free will in a mature way to follow G’s laws e.g. Abel, Noah, Abraham, Job, etc.
What is Pelagius’ view of the role of grace in salvation?
• Humans = able to fulfil the law w/o divine aid ∴ can achieve salvation by freely choosing to do “good works”
• But, all good works = done only w/ G’s grace (“assisted by divine help”)
• ∴ G’s grace = enabling, not determining good works
• G = an agent of empowerment that allows us the freedom to do good works
• However, humans have the capacity to ignore G’s guidance and be sinful
- Ability to sin = good ∵ emphasises goodness when a human does good works - “this very capacity to do evil is also good […] Because it makes the good part better by making it voluntary and independent”
- When ppl freely sin, can seek forgiveness through G’s grace to achieve salvation - universal atonement
According to Pelagius, is grace necessary for salvation?
• Only if we have all sinned
To avoid Pelagius’ view of grace being accused of being Manichaean, what is the role and nature of the grace?
• It is a ‘light touch’ when compared to the absolute dependence of Aug’s theo.
Give a summary of Pelagius’ views.
- Free will allows good works but challenges the nature of salvation
- OS raises question of poss. of sich depraved creatures achieving good
- Aug = terrified of Pel.’s theory ∵ teaches that humans have a decisive role
- OS = aligned w/ Manichaean teaching + an excuse not to strive for a moral life
How does Arminius deny predestination?
- Arm. = taught by son-in-law + successor of Calvin, Theodore Beza
- Arm. became dissatisfied w/ Calvinism + rejected his C’s version of pre.d (he does not reject pre.d)
- Made his own pre.d theory, which was grounded in the theo. concept of G’s providence + was compatible w/ notion of free will (but he did not teach the priority of free will)
What is Arminius’ revised form of predestination called? Elaborate on it.
• Conditional/middle knowledge predestination
• This refers to foreknowledge w/o determinism
- Closely linked to providence, the idea that G = closely involved in monitoring/guiding the created world - “a solicitous, continued, and universally present supervision of God over the whole world […] without any exception”
• Key to the governance of the world = theo. idea of divine concurrence
- G ‘concurs’ human activity throught being part of it and providing the powers and abilities to act
• Free will cannot be outside the parameter of G’s prov.
• Does not mean that creatures = merely vehicles through which G acts
- G = enabler; not the same as doing the action for the creature
- This is crucially imp. for his idea of free will and how is theology is compatible w/ pre.d
According to Arminius, what is the effect of original sin on free will?
• Arm. = opposed to the idea that the origin of sin can be found in G.
• As a result of divine concurrence, G permits sinful act but it does not mean that he approves of sinful behaviour
- ∵ G = omnipotent + omnibenevolent, part of his goodness is to be able to produce goods from evils - this is a superior solution than to not allow evils at all (similar to Aug.)
• Unlike Pel., Arm believes that orig. sin from fall = bad for humankind
- Orig. sin = lack of orig. righteousness + a punishment
Explain Arminius’ idea of God’s ‘prevenient’ grace in allowing humans to exercise free will.
- G’s providence gives the grace to freely choose the righteous path in life - humans are not predestined to continually sin ∵ of G’s loving grace
- G’s grace = ass. w/ HS; this ass. = called ‘prevenient grace’ ∵ it precedes each moral decision; it is ever-present to assist
- G has placed his HS within all humans; HS encourages good works
- The HS will “fight against Satan, sin, the world, and their own flesh”
What does Rustin Brian say that Arminius’ “fundamental impulse” is?
• that “all are elect in Christ, and thus have the real possibility of salvation. God does not will that anyone should perish or be damned”
Explain Arminius’ ideas of the elect, the possibility of rejecting God’s grace, and the election of believers being conditional on faith.
- Despite G’s providence and middle knowledge, salvation is available to all
- Arm.: “election to salvation and reprobation to condemnation are conditional. God chooses those who are foreknown to be penitent believers, and he condemns those he knows to be impenitent unbelievers”
- Through m.k., G knows who will reject his prevenient grace and then persevere in G’s subsequent grace to salvation
- Arm.: God has limited his control in correspondence with man’s freedom.
- ∴ G has provided poss. of salvation for all humanity, but it only becomes available/effective for those who, of their free will, choose to accept G’s offer of grace and cooperate w/ the HS