Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Review 4: Piper's Future of Justification

Chapter 2 of John Piper's book on N. T. Wright is entitled:
"The Relationship between Covenant and Law-Court Imagery for Justification"

Justification as Covenant Membership?
In this chapter Piper deals with what indeed is one of Wright's more idiosyncratic views, namely, "Justification is not how someone becomes a Christian. It is the declaration that they have become a Christian" (What Saint Paul Really Said, 122, 125). Or in another place Wright says, "Justification, for Paul, is not (in Sanders' terminology) how one 'gets into' God's people but about God's declaration that someone is in" ("New Perspectives on Paul," in Justification in Perspective, 261).

In other words, to use E. P. Sanders' words, N. T. Wright denies that "justification" is "transfer terminology," to "make righteous."

I agree with Piper that Wright's understanding of Paul on this topic is peculiar and confusing. Wright's varied ways of circling around this concept are like someone whose attempts to explain something only confuse you more.

Piper argues that Wright's understanding of justification, "conflates implication and definition." In other words, certainly justification implies that a person is now part of the people of God. But Wright doesn't want to say that. For Wright, justification seems to indicate that one is already in. For Wright, justification is the declaration that you are in.

At the same time, Wright sees justification as law-court language as well. Piper quotes Paul in Fresh Perspective when Wright says that "belonging to the covenant" (i.e., what Wright believes justification declares) means "forgiven sinner" (121). I find this confusing, and I am not alone.

Where I think the confusion lies is with Wright's idiosyncratic views of covenant, something I'm sure Piper will give us ample opportunity to examine. Let me try to "de-covenantify" Wright's language so that his views seem more plausible in relation to Paul.

What if Wright were to say that justification is a declaration of our innocence, the verdict of "not guilty" pronounced at our trial? In that sense, the verdict would presuppose forgiveness. The verdict would presuppose atonement. But the verdict would not be exactly identical to forgiveness or atonement. It would be the pronouncement of a legal verdict, a declaration if you would, that presupposed those things.

If this is what Wright is saying--but obfuscating by introducing his covenant ideas into the mix--then his comments begin to make more sense.

The problem is of course that legal language (from an illocutionary standpoint :-) is not simply language of assertion or declaration. The pronouncement of a verdict establishes that declaration as the official status of the defendant. In that sense, to limit justification to a declaration is inadequate. The innocence of the defendant is legally established in the declaration.

Piper does not express his objection to Wright with this clarity, but he rightly points out passages in Paul that redirect Wright's focus:

"God reckons righteousness [dikaiosyne] apart from works" (Rom. 4:6)
"A person is justified [dikaioo] by faith apart from works of law" (Rom. 3:28)

Piper rightly sees that these are roughly equivalent statements and thus that to justify is to "reckon righteous" (Piper prefers the NASB translation "credit righteousness"). Paul's use of Psalm 32 in Romans 4 further clarifies what this involves:

"Blessed are those whose lawless acts have been forgiven
And whose sins have been covered.
Blessed is the one to whom the Lord does not reckon sin" (Rom. 4:7-8).

Wright is probably correct to steer us away from seeing such language in isolation from the Jew-Gentile issue. But it remains to be seen whether he has done this in a way that helps or truly clarifies these nuances in Paul's thought. I'm sure there is more to come on this topic.

Penal Substitution
I'm sure it made great sense to Piper to discuss Wright in relation to penal substitution in this chapter. Penal substitution plays such a focal role in Piper's theology that he can hardly think of justification without thinking about who is paying the check for this "credit" we get. In that sense, I think the explanation of justification I have made above is not exactly the way Piper thinks of it.

Penal substitution is the idea that, in some way, Jesus took the punishment for our sins on the cross.

Piper takes some time in this chapter to discuss what has been a very controversial matter in his circles, namely, Wright's endorsement of a book by Steve Chalke entitled The Lost Message of Jesus. In a now famous line in that book, Chalke suggests that if the cross was a personal act of violence on God's part, it makes a mockery of Jesus' teaching to love your enemies and is tantamount to cosmic child abuse (182-83 of Chalke's book).

Wright has made a lengthy blog response to this controversy, indicating his support of penal substitution as a biblical idea and defending Chalke as a believer in it as well. Piper is skeptical whether Chalke believes in it and while accepting that Wright does, once again suggests that Wright's comments on the subject have been confusing.

Wright himself suggests that there is more than one understanding of penal substitution and that Chalke simply does not have the form most vigorously argued in certain evangelical circles (e.g., Piper's).

Certainly the idea of penal substitution is major for Piper's theology. Piper is a "7 point Calvinist," by which I mean he thinks God not only has predestined those who will be saved but also those who will be damned, Adam (6th point), and even Satan (7th point). The affirmation that God is love is devoid of any familiar meaning in this system.

We might summarize Piper's theology here as "God so loved himself that He sent His only Son (admiring Himself greatly for so doing), that whoever He has chosen to save will irresistably believe and so have eternal life." Love has no meaning whatsoever in Piper's system. It amounts to little more than divine masturbation.

So Piper will not be able to see the real tension between the biblical affirmation that God is love (presumably using that word in its normal sense rather than some convoluted way that alters it beyond recognition) and the orthodox perspective that God had to punish sin. This is the orthodox Christian perspective, although books such as Joel Green and Mark Baker's Recovering the Scandal of the Cross, show how Piper's version of it is an extreme form of the idea.

I personally think Green and Baker's book represents the opposite extreme. Nevertheless, they raise very important and significant questions. For example, it seems to contradict the sovereignty of God to suggest that He would not be allowed, by divine fiat, to forgive us of our sins without someone needing to pay. Jesus' parables do not in any way point to a doctrine of penal substitution. For example, the father of the prodigal son does not tell the prodigal that he'd be glad to welcome him back... as long as he can find someone to pay back the debt he has incurred. Rather, the father seems to have the authority to pronounce the son forgiven, period.

For this reason, it seems clear to me that while penal substitution is one appropriate way to understand Christ's atonement, it is not the only one or even the central Christian one. Piper's views on atonement are extreme and ultimately unbiblical in focus.

10 comments:

luke middleton said...

"Love has no meaning whatsoever in Piper's system."

You may serve your readers more by, as they say in Mathematics, "showing your work". Your passing summary of Piper's theology (while showing some signs of familiarity with and understanding of) I'm not sure would be the most effective way to educate those unfamiliar with his preaching and writing (and it does seem that you are writing to help accommodate readers who need background in Piper -- thanks for doing that).

Your summary seems to offer more of your conclusion than the work with Scripture (for or against Piper's affirmations) that got you to your conclusion.

The summary was, I believe, somewhat incomplete. You said "Love has no meaning whatsoever in Piper's system." Well, Piper does use the word love -- a lot. And it does have a definition in his system. Is it different than your definition? Most likely. But, maybe it would serve the reader more to hear Piper's definition of love and then to incorporate his view of joy and his affirmation that Christ is supremely satisfying. Then debunk that using Scripture.

Thanks for reading this book and for sharing your thoughts on it.

luke middleton said...

Also, what you affirmed as Piper's seventh point of Calvinism was maybe a form of an outworking of his seventh point (Piper's seventh point is that this is the best of all possible worlds), but really seems to not communicate the highest level summary of what that seventh point is. The way you presented it, it seems to be a subpoint of the sixth point (double predestination) and seems to focus on Satan. Again, while part of what you affirmed here could be included as a part of Piper's seventh point, I'm not sure it really paints the picture that Piper affirms.

Raffi Shahinian said...

Hello Ken:

This is an edifying discussion and I'm glad you're engaging in it. I've also started to tackle Piper's book in my own blog. I'd be honored if you would take a look and let me know what you think.

Grace and Peace,
Raffi Shahinian

Angie Van De Merwe said...

Interesting review, analysis and discussion...I haven't finished N.T. Wright's blog you suggested, but I'm "working on it"...

I think one rightly rejects Piper's view based on the definition/understanding of "love".... Piper's view aligns itself well with understanding the "holiness" of God in judging sin apart from understandin that holiness itself is identified with "love"...and seeks to recitify his "love" with God's mercy in "unconditional election"....So, the reformers separate holiness from love in their theology...

Whereas, Jesus, as "love incarnated", exemplified God's love in the "narrative of his life"...this is a "noble death", in that one seeks after noble causes to give one's life to....

God's character is mostly manifested within the community of believers in the "love of his people" for one another, which is the "spirit of holiness"...Compassion is the hallmark of God's love...in that identification of the lover to the loved is necessary for there to be a rectifying of wrong (injustice). This is what laying one's life down is all about...

It seems that Wright's understanding, if I am understanding him correctly, is that the "pronouncement" of "good news" is not about a future, but a present "hope"...a salvation or inclusion of the Gentiles into the "people of God"...It is a "done deal", as the "good news" is not about relgion at all, but about God's mercy, His acceptance of the "sinner"...not his condemnation...Because of a re-identification...or transfer of identity to "God's people", then, believers are commended to "walk" differently...which is sanctification...Sanctification flows out of/from justification....because we define ourselves by new terms which have new meanings and new contexts...

So, it is not about doctrine, in that, it is about "Jesus" death, but about ours, as we seek to follow after his "moral example"...as believers...

Mark Schnell said...

In the book just released in the states, Pierced for our Transgressions, Jeffrey, Ovey, and Sach answer Green and Baker's book with: "We agree that a comprehensive doctrine of atonement must include other themes besides penal substitution. But then again, we have never read a proponent of penal substitution who claims that penal substitution is the only motif connected with the atonement of scriptures." (210)

I'm not trying to defend Piper, I only know him from what you have written, but he did write the forward to this book. I just wrote a paper on atonement and the Biblical model of many different motifs being used to explain it so some of these things were fresh on my mind.

I appreciate your reference to N.T. Wright's blog article. I read that a few weeks ago and it seems to me that some people should feel foolish that they didn't follow up a little better with Chalke the way Wright did. I haven't read Chalke's book yet but it appears Wright's follow up proves that people have written books and articles and gotten up in arms about the "cosmic child abuse" statement because they have taken it out of context.

Ken, some of those same kind of people might take your "divine masturbation" comment and do the same thing. Look out! ;-)

P.S. There was an article in the July 2007 issue of Christianity Today (pages 15-16) where Chalke is mentioned as having signed an Evangelical Alliance statement affirming penal substitution. It then goes on to say that others were confused that he signed it. People should dig a little deeper before they want to crucify people and break faith with others.

Ken Schenck said...

First, Luke, thanks for pushing back on Piper's definition of love. For whatever reason I'm having trouble putting a link to an online article he wrote called "The Goal of God's Love May Not Be What You Think It Is." I'll end with the link because I know I can get that to work!

In it, he says that "The love of God is not God's making much of us, but God's saving us from self-centeredness so that we can enjoy making much of him forever." Basically, God loves us to love Him.

I can't see that the word love means much of anything unless it has a true investment in the "other" and in Piper's system it is simply a narcissistic skeet shooter. He shows His glory by shooting some skeet, and He revels in His great love for occasionally choosing to shoot His Son instead of the next skeet.

He's like a husband who causes his wife to mess up and then shows his love for her by cleaning up the mess and glorying in her worship in him for being so loving.

As far as the sixth and seventh points, thanks for correcting my misunderstanding of what they were precisely. My understanding is that Piper not only believes in double predestination, but that God predestined the fall of Satan and Adam as well.

Here's the link to the article I mentioned:

Ken Schenck said...

Angie, good to hear from you. How's Washington?

Mark, I saw the book you mention when I was linking to Green's book. I have to give it to the ETS crowd--they have a machine to respond to the new perspective and other challenges to their paradigm. (I realize there are faux-Arminians in ETS too :-)

DBrothers said...

Thanks for the posts on Piper's new book. I actually picked up the book just so I could follow along with your posts.

Just being able to give Chapter One a quick glance, it appears to me that Piper assumes that he is reading Scripture purely, while Wright is reading Scripture with a non-canonical lens (other first century texts). Surely Piper understands that we all read with lens - part of critical reading is to become more insightful about the lens that we choose to read with.

My hunch though (I have barely begun Piper's book) is that he will pluck at the lens in front of Wright's eyes -without owning up to the thick frames around his own.

Mark Schnell said...

Oops, I mentioned in an earlier post that some people should follow up better on Chalke or they'll look foolish. Then I went out and got Piper's book today so I could follow along with this discussion and found out that Piper includes the ENTIRE aforementioned blog posting by Wright.

So he did do his homework and I didn't!

Reminds me of what Scott McKnight told someone on his blog, people should actually read what others have actually said before they comment on it. ;-0

luke middleton said...

Thanks, Ken.

Thanks for bringing more direct quotes from Piper to the table to enable better discussion.

When Piper says: "In it, he says that "The love of God is not God's making much of us, but God's saving us from self-centeredness so that we can enjoy making much of him forever." I think you still need to dig deeper into Piper's theology to find out why He believes that is love.

Piper addresses your point in his DVD "The Blazing Center" when he responds to an article he read in a UK Newspaper where the writer shared that reading the Bible (and I think specifically the Psalms) made him sick because it was constantly God saying, "Worship Me, look to Me, it's all about Me, etc." and it turned the man off.

Narcissism, as you said? The problem here is that it is GOD loving us -- not people loving people. The difference is that God is ultimately fulfilling, ultimately glorious, and supremely worthy of our praise, worship, and affect for eternity. No one, nothing (not any focus on ourselves) will make us happy. With Paul, Christ must increase and we must decrease. Our run-of-the-mill definition of love involves give and take. Not so with God -- what do we have that He did not give us? The best love we can have for another human is not to make much of them, but to make much of Christ and to point them to Him.

"and He revels in His great love for occasionally choosing to shoot His Son instead of the next skeet."

Did Christ not die for our sins? Is that not unmerited mercy and grace?