Some time ago I
wrote a blog on the doctrine of
total depravity. Various subsequent conversations have kept bringing me back to
the subject. In The Salvation Army it is a key issue, possibly ranking only
just behind the doctrine of scripture as an indicator of where we are and where
we are going. In particular, the common misconception that there can only be
responsibility where there is innate ability is a constant point of attrition, and
reflects a misunderstanding of the doctrine of sin.
What I have
noticed is a tendency to set the doctrine of sin over against the doctrine of
the image of God, in such a way that the two modify, or leak into, each
other. The confusion gets worse still when the Wesleyan doctrine of prevenient
grace is added to the mix.
So, by way of just one example, in a Facebook conversation about whether we are "naturally attracted to holiness", a friend who is a Salvationist can say, "Although I agree that we need to know we are sick to know we need medicine, I think, although we naturally side with sin since the fall, God also does give us the power and the choice to live a life of Holiness. Because although we are fallen we also are made in the image of God, even if the fallenness does come out more often than not."
In that paragraph, the doctrines of Image, Sin and Grace are swirling around and intermixed. If "God gives us power" were related to grace, it would not be so problematic, but it seems to be based in the image of God. The result is, effectively, a watering down of total depravity which, as I hope my last piece made clear, takes the real urgency out of the gospel of Jesus and leaves us in the same boat as all the other religions.
The
problem starts with a lack of appreciation of salvation history. If the
doctrines concerned are only viewed in the abstract, uprooted from their place in
the Story, then there will be a greater risk of 'leakage' between them. Salvation history should ground us. The image of God is a concept from
creation; whatever happens to that concept as a result of sin, it must be
understood as starting in that pre-fall condition. Total depravity describes the
condition of those who are in the image of God. It is post fall; it describes the
spiritual inability of fallen people. It cannot be "modified" by the Imago
Dei; rather, it assumes it, as the Image is the very backdrop against which sin, and the
doctrine of sin, comes in. Finally, God's grace is revealed, starting in the
sequence of curses that come with the fall. There will be a victory over
the enemy: a victory on behalf of people made in the image of God who have
fallen into total depravity.
The
Image of God (often called the Imago Dei; a bit of Latin sounds impressive!) is about the purpose and honour of
humankind as created. In an era when kings set up statues in their likeness in
the city squares of their empire, where heralds would stand in front of those
images and proclaim their laws and demands for tribute, the language of
"Image and likeness" was instantly recognisable when describing man
as the one who would "have dominion" as God's regent and
representative on earth. Within the framework of the narrative of the handiwork
of God in Gen 1, the Image of God sets the human race apart as the pinnacle of
his creativity, with particular dignity and honour within the created order,
but the phrase above all highlights our purpose within the world. We are
not merely in the image of God; we are the image of God.
The fall ushers in the era
of failure to live up to purpose, and it does so precisely because the
fall IS radical failure at the very heart of that purpose. Human dominion is to
be under God; the world is there to be explored and enjoyed in submission to
his supreme rule. The exploration and enjoyment is to be shaped at its
heart - at the centre of the map - by a seemingly arbitrary commandment whose
purpose is to demonstrate commitment to his higher authority. At the moment
that the couple eat the fruit, they come to the "knowledge of good and
evil" in the sense of taking it upon themselves to define their own moral
boundaries, instead of submitting to the creator. They are no longer heralds of
his will, the spokespeople of his voice into the world. They now declare their
own wills, and all hell (some hell, actually) is let loose.
Imagine a magnificent car,
from the classic era of big touring cars. Something like a 4.5 litre Bentley.
Imagine it in perfect road condition, built for speed, able to race, turning
heads, an awesomely beautiful machine. Then someone comes along and takes a
crowbar to the valve rockers. They use the same tool to twist and distort the
brake mechanism out of all functionality. They remove the steering wheel. They
syphon out the fuel, and for good measure they blow up the oil wells and
refineries; the fuel is made completely unavailable.
The
car is still magnificent. It is still intrinsically beautiful and valuable. But
its fitness for purpose is utterly wrecked. It cannot move. If it rolls down a
hill it is at the mercy of every bump and twist in the ground. It can't stop at
the bottom. It cannot be moved uphill except by an outside force. It is
impressive and full of grandeur. Further vandalism would still be crime, but it
is totally unable to fulfil its purpose.
We are
not machines, but that is a description of total depravity. The dignity and
worth of the image remains, but functionality is hopelessly compromised. Every
aspect of purpose is affected and rendered useless. If you saw the wrecked car
in motion, you would know that it was more of a danger than a joy. If you saw a
number of them rolling down a hillside, you would know that, despite apparently
chaotic paths taken, they had one thing in common - the downhill pull of
gravity.
No, we are not cars. A car can't wreck itself, which is what we did. But insofar as any illustration is useful, the car helps. We are beautiful, but unfit for purpose. Valuable but unable to fulfil our role. Pushed about by circumstances and trends of thought instead of ruling with maturity and stability under God. In the chaos of human existence, the one thread running through human behaviour is sin, as we career downhill and away from our Creator.
What
we must not do is play the doctrines of Image and Depravity off against each
other. We are not permitted to look at that classic, wrecked, car and say,
"It's so beautiful - I can't believe it's useless!" or,
conversely, "It's so wrecked, it can't have any value!" Rather, the
brilliant glory of the Creator is seen precisely in the fact that something of
his magnificence is still so clear even in his vandalised handiwork. And the
gravity of sin is highlighted by the grandeur and obvious dignity of what was wrecked.
It is
against that backdrop that we see grace. We are utterly unable and utterly
undeserving to be what we ought to be, even though what we ought to be is
written all over us. And yet, instead of coming in judgement, God comes to our
wrecked creaturehood to bring light, to repair, to enable. His grace operates
at precisely the level where the fall occurred - he draws us to a humble
submission to his word and away from proud, independent self-sufficiency and
self-determination. But the Word to which we are drawn is not simply a word of command, the
proving point of who has authority in the world, but a Word of promise, the
commitment of the Creator to forgive, to re-create, to transform, to re-form
humanity. By grace we are remade in the full glory and perfection of his unspoiled image, gathered round
a new man, our head, our captain, our champion, our authentic Adam, Jesus
Christ.
In a
depraved world such grace is "wholly other". It isn't an outcropping
of the image of God - it isn't a "bit of goodness left in us". It is
all from God and it is all new. Once again, we mix the concepts at our peril.
Leakage of Image into Grace will destroy the doctrine of Depravity - and then
grace will no longer be grace.
Last
Saturday saw the commissioning in London of new lieutenants of the Messengers
of Light session. The Territorial Commander spoke of exactly the distinctions
seen in these doctrines, but in terms of light and darkness. Into a world of
original chaos and darkness, God spoke Light at creation. But then human
beings, the shining crown jewel of God's brilliant creation, chose darkness
instead of light. We chose it, it overthrew us, we wallowed in it. And into
that new, man-chosen darkness, God spoke light again. Personified light. Light
incarnate. The Light of the world. And for those new lieutenants, as for every
Christian, our calling is to carry that light into the world. The way to be faithful Messengers of Light is to live in the light consistently, and to communicate the light in truthful words. Nowhere is that more critical than in clarity on sin and grace.
As a " non" theologian nor mega apologist, I found your efforton this was done in such a way, to where I wouldn't need a Vine's Greek or Hebrew lexicons! Thanks Much for the efforts.CaniacSteve,USA-South Territory
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