Kerux vs TLNF

I’ve been slowly working my way through TLNF one chapter at a time. I’m about half way through. I really enjoy the book. There is a lot of great material – particularly Brenton C Ferry’s Taxonomy and Bryan D Estelle’s chapter on Leviticus 18:5 and Deuteronomy 30:1-14. However, I have been concerned from the outset that the book is handicapped by fear.

While I find much biblical merit for what they say, I have become rather convinced that their position is contrary to the WCF. That doesn’t matter for me, cause I’m just an ignorant 1689 babtist. But it does mean I’m sensitive to how the thesis and arguments of TLNF are muddied because of their desire to remain within the bounds of the WCF.

One example is the almost absolute silence about John Owen. Owen has written perhaps the very best articulation and defense of republication in his commentary on Hebrews 8:6-13. Owen’s argument is thorough (150 pages on those 7 verses) and very convincing. So why not rely upon him in TLNF? Because in the course of his argument he rejected the opinion of the “reformed divines” and WCF 7.6, saying “Having noted these things, we may consider that the Scripture does plainly and expressly make mention of two testaments, or covenants, and distinguish between them in such a way as can hardly be accommodated by a twofold administration of the same covenant.”

So Owen provides an excellent argument for republication, but in a book devoted to republication, he is silenced because he believes republication is contrary to WCF 7.6. So clarity is sacrificed for tradition.

Fesko on Calvin

All this is simply a preface to what I want to comment on. A very lengthy 150 page review of TLNF was published in the Kerux journal. Apparently there is all kinds of history I should be aware of regarding Kerux, as R. Scott Clark’s blog series “Consider the Source” implies (and I’m sure he’s probably right). He asserts quite strongly that no one should waste their time reading the review, saying “After re-reading ONLY the first breathless page of the review I do not and cannot repent of anything I said earlier. Indeed, the review is more poorly written, more amateur, and more shoddy than I remembered. There is so much that is objectionable on the first page of the review alone, I stop there.” And he refers to it as an “ill-begotten waste of time passing itself off as a review.”

Now, to be clear, I agree with the idea of republication – but that doesn’t mean I can’t learn from the Kerux review, and it doesn’t mean the Kerux review can’t be right in its critique of TLNF. I approached Patrick Ramsey’s essay in WTJ and his blog posts in the same way, and learned a lot by doing so https://contrast2.wordpress.com/2010/02/11/confusing-law-and-gospel-and-the-wcf/

I was working on another blog post after reading W. Gary Crampton’s “From Paedobaptism to Credobaptism” where he references a passage of Calvin’s Institutes (2.11.10). I read the passage and others around it, which I had read before – but something seemed different from what I had remembered about it. I went back and looked at Fesko’s chapter from TLNF where he references a similar passage (2.11.4) and was immediately struck by how inaccurate Fesko’s representation of Calvin was and how confusing he had made a rather clear statement from Calvin.

Here is what Calvin said:

…For through animal sacrifices it could neither blot out sins nor bring about true sanctification. He therefore concludes that there was in the law “the shadow of good things to come,” not “the living likeness of the things themselves” [Heb 10:1]. Therefore its sole function was to be an introduction to the better hope that is manifested in the gospel [Heb 7:19; and Ps. 110:4; Heb 7:11; 9:9; 10:1].

Here we are to observe how the covenant of the law compares with the covenant of the gospel, the ministry of Christ with that of Moses. For if the comparison had reference to the substance of the promises, then there would be great disagreement between the Testaments. But since the trend of the argument leads us in another direction, we must follow it to find the truth. Let us then set forth the covenant that he once established as eternal and never-perishing. Its fulfillment, by which it is finally confirmed and ratified, is Christ. While such confirmation was awaited, the Lord appointed, through Moses, ceremonies that were, so to speak, solemn symbols of that confirmation. A controversy arose over whether or not the ceremonies that had been ordained in the law ought to give way to Christ. Now these were only the accidental properties of the covenant, or additions and appendages, and in common parlance, accessories of it. Yet because they were means of administering it, they bear the name “covenant,” just as is customary in the case of other sacraments. To sum up then, in this passage “Old Testament” means the solemn manner of confirming the covenant, comprised in ceremonies and sacrifices.

Because nothing substantial underlies this unless we go beyond it, the apostle contends that it ought to be terminated and abrogated, to give place to Christ, the Sponsor and Mediator of a better covenant [cf. Heb 7:22]; whereby he imparts eternal sanctifications once and for all to the elect, blotting out their transgressions, which remained under the law. Or, if you prefer, understand it thus: the Old Testament of the Lord was that covenant wrapped up in the shadowy and ineffectual observance of ceremonies and delivered to the Jews; it was temporary because it remained, as it were, in suspense until it might rest upon a firm and substantial confirmation. It became new and eternal only after it was consecrated and established by the blood of Christ. Hence Christ in the Supper calls the cup that he gives to his disciples “the cup of the New Testament in my blood” [Luke 22:20]. By this he means that the Testament of God attained its truth when sealed by his blood, and thereby becomes new and eternal.

2.11.4

So Calvin is talking about the two administrations of the single eternal covenant [of grace]. He calls one administration (Moses) the covenant of the law and he calls the other administration (Christ) the covenant of the gospel. He insists that the difference between the two is only accidental (meaning non-essential appearances), and not in the “substance of the promises.” Finally, he says the covenant of the law and the covenant of the gospel are successive, not concurrent.

Now, is this what we find in Fesko’s summary of Calvin’s teaching on the covenant of law and the covenant of the gospel?

Given Calvin’s explanation of soteriology in the OT, one has a framework in which to understand the place and function of the Mosaic covenant in his theology. Calvin explains that with the dispensation of the Mosaic covenant there are two separate covenants, the foedus legale and the foedus evangelicum, the ministries of Moses and Christ (2.11.4). There is a sense in which Calvin sees these two covenants in an antithetical relationship to one another, as the law functions within the foedus legale only “to enjoin what is right, to forbid what is wicked; to promise a reward to the keepers of righteousness, and threaten transgressors with punishment” (2.11.7). In other words, Calvin is not afraid to say that the Mosaic administration of the law sets forth a covenant governed by a works principle, namely, eternal life through obedience: “We cannot gainsay that the reward of eternal salvation awaits complete obedience to the law, as the Lord has promised” (2.7.3). The problem, however, with this covenant of obedience is, because of man’s sinfulness, “righteousness is taught in vain by the commandments until Christ confers it by free imputation and by the Spirit of regeneration” (2.7.2). Calvin, therefore, sees the Mosaic covenant characterized by the promise of eternal life which can be obtained by Israel’s obedience, yet because of her sin, Israel is unable to fulfill the requirements of the covenant – only Christ was able to do this.

In this sense, then, the foedus legale and the foedus evangelicum are antithetical, in that they both extend the promise of salvation, the former through obedience and the latter through faith in Christ.

Wow. Was that anything close to what we just read from Calvin? No. Fesko misrepresents Calvin to make Calvin say exactly what the entire volume of TLNF is attempting to argue. How convenient. Fesko first twists Calvin’s words regarding a foedus legale and a foedus evangelicum to say they were two different covenants both operating during the Mosaic dispensation. Calvin nowhere says that. He says they are two successive administrations of the one covenant. Fesko then moves out of Calvin’s 2.11.4 passage where Calvin uses the term “covenant of law” and uses quotes where Calvin is talking about the moral law narrowly and apart from the Mosaic covenant. All this in an attempt to make Calvin say the Mosaic covenant operated on a works principle. Note Fesko’s “in other words” because he can’t find any actual words from Calvin to say what he wants Calvin to say.

This was a very disappointing realization for me as I have really enjoyed Fesko’s “Justification: Understanding the Classic Reformed Doctrine” and I must now question everything I have read in that book. The authors of the Kerux review were spot on in their critique of Fesko on this point:

What then, does Fesko say is Calvin’s view of the Mosaic covenant? According to him, “Calvin explains that in the dispensation of the Mosaic covenant there are two separate covenants” (30). What evidence does Fesko provide to support this view? He appeals to Calvin’s linguistic distinction between a foedus legale and a foedus evangelicum, arguing that there is “a sense in which Calvin sees these two covenants in an antithetical relationship to one another” (30). The primary difference, for Fesko, is that the foedus legale “sets forth a covenant governed by a works principle, namely, eternal life through obedience” (30).

However, there is a problem with Fesko’s analysis. The terms foedus legale and foedus evangelicum are almost always (for Calvin) terms used to describe the various administrations of the covenant of grace, not a “separate covenant,” characterized by a “works principle” operative in the Mosaic administration. This is clearly the case in 2.11.4 of the Institutes (which Fesko cites to defend his analysis), where Calvin writes (commenting on Heb. 7-10):

Here we are to observe how the covenant of the law (legale) compares with the covenant of the gospel (evangelicum), the ministry of Christ with that of Moses. For if the comparison had reference to the substance of the promises, there would be great disagreement between the Testaments. But since the trend of argument leads us in another direction, we must follow it to find the truth.

For Calvin, the foedus legale and foedus evangelicum are not “two separate covenants” as Fesko states, but they are in fact two names for two different administrations of the same covenant. The comparison between the foedus legale and the foedus evangelicum does not refer to the “substance” of the covenants. Rather as Calvin goes on to explain in the same section, the two terms only refer to a twofold way of administering the same covenant:

Let us then set forth the covenant that he once established as eternal and never-perishing. Its fulfillment, by which it is finally confirmed and ratified, is Christ. While such con- firmation was awaited, the Lord appointed, through Moses, ceremonies that were, so to speak, solemn symbols of that confirmation. A controversy arose over whether or not the ceremonies that had been ordained in the law ought to give way to Christ. Now these were only the accidental proper- ties of the covenant, or additions and appendages, and in common parlance, accessories of it. Yet, because they were means of administering it, they bear the name “covenant,” just as is customary in the case of the other sacraments. To sum up, then, in this passage “Old Testament” means the solemn manner of confirming the covenant, comprised in ceremonies and sacrifices (2.11.4).

In 2.11.4, Calvin is not teaching that the Mosaic covenant should be viewed as a “separate covenant” governed by a works-principle. In fact, Calvin makes the opposite point in this very passage, namely, that the Mosaic covenant is essentially a covenant of grace, though differently administered.

Fesko also appeals to Calvin’s Institutes 2.11.7 to support his interpretation of the foedus legale. The reader should note the jump: the first quote comes from 2.11.4, while the second comes three sections later. The two are then woven together in a way that makes them appear like a seamless garment. But in 2.11.7, Calvin is not speaking of a “separate covenant” during the Mosaic administration, but rather of “the mere nature of the law” abstracted from that covenant. Calvin is analyzing the words of Hebrews and Jeremiah, whom he says “consider nothing in law, but what properly belongs to it.” As the very next section (2.11.8) clearly demonstrates, Calvin understands Jeremiah to be speaking simply of the moral law itself, not of a “separate covenant” operative in the Mosaic administration: “Indeed, Jeremiah even calls the moral law a weak and fragile covenant [Jer. 31:32].” In other words, Fesko’s error is that he applies what Calvin says about the moral law to a separate covenant in the Mosaic administration. This is very strange, considering that he himself had told us at the start of the article that—“When one explores Calvin’s understanding of the function of the law, he must therefore carefully distinguish whether he has the moral law or the law as the Mosaic covenant in mind” (28). Well said. But when it comes to one of the most crucial points in his reading of Calvin, he chooses to ignore that distinction and applies what Calvin says about the moral law to the Mosaic covenant itself.

The significance of this mistake cannot be underestimated. It is the only primary document evidence that Fesko gives to support this key aspect of his thesis. On page 33, he summarizes in six points his thesis regarding Calvin’s view of the Mosaic covenant. To points 1-4, we say “Amen.” But for the reasons outlined above we cannot agree with points 5-6.

(5) The Mosaic administration of the law is specifically a foedus legale in contrast to the foedus evangelicum, the re- spective ministries of Moses and Christ; and (6) the foedus legale is based upon a works principle but no one is able to fulfill its obligations except Christ (33).

What Fesko should have said is that for Calvin, the moral law, narrowly considered, promises eternal life for perfect obedience. To say that the “Mosaic covenant is characterized by a works principle” (32) is only to confuse what Calvin keeps clear. The moral law itself may promise life for perfect obedience, but Calvin does not speak this way about the Mosaic covenant or the foedus legale.

December 2009 issue of Kerux: The Journal of Northwest Theological Seminary (PDF, 1.03 MB)

If the Kerux review is a “poorly written, amateur, and shoddy ill-begotten waste of time” then what is TLNF?

Fesko states: “Calvin uses the distinction between form and substance to explain that the Mosaic covenant, as to its substance, is part of the spirituale foedus, but as to its form, its administratio is a foedus legale.” This is accurate, but the problem is that Fesko misrepresents (or perhaps misunderstands) what “substance” means. As already noted, Calvin says precisely the opposite of Fesko. Fesko claims “Calvin is not afraid to say that the Mosaic administration of the law sets forth a covenant governed by a works principle, namely, eternal life through obedience.” And yet Calvin argues the exact opposite, saying “if the comparison had reference to the substance of the promises, then there would be great disagreement between the Testaments.”

Saying that one covenant promises eternal life upon personal obedience, and the other promises life upon faith in Christ is to say that they differ in substance – according to Calvin (and everyone else who used the term). And this is precisely the point of dispute regarding the entire TLNF volume. Fesko has muddied the waters in an already confusing debate. For the sake of tradition, he has forsaken clarity. I agree with the Kerux review when it says:

Fesko misinterprets and misrepresents Calvin’s position by suppressing the above-mentioned aspects of his teaching. In so doing, Fesko makes Calvin sound more like one of his (and the other authors) favorite contemporary covenant theologians: Meredith G. Kline. In fact, in our opinion, he appears to be doing nothing more than Mark Karlberg did before him: reading a form of Kline’s view onto Calvin. Kline taught that in the Mosaic administration there were two separate covenants: one of works, and one of grace. The former was superimposed upon the underlying substratum of the Abrahamic covenant of grace. Again, Fesko’s interest in vindicating his own view (Kline’s) of the Mosaic covenant seems to have created a roadblock in his efforts for an “accurate contextualized historical theology.”

Personally, I think that Kline’s formulation is more biblical than Calvin’s. But we shouldn’t be afraid to say it is different.

P.S. (This does not mean Kerux is correct in everything it says or that R. Scott Clark is wrong in all he said in response to it)

11 thoughts on “Kerux vs TLNF

  1. Nick Mackison

    Hi Brandon, hope you are well. I’m new to this debate and have not read much of Calvin generally or TLNF. Yet, from what I’ve read, I’m not sure that the Kerux guys are being entirely fair on Fesko.

    Some observations:

    First, I understood Fesko’s point on the first reading of his paragraph, whereas I had to read the Kerux point over and over before I could make head or tail of it. I just don’t understand what they mean about Calvin isolating the moral law in Moses. If clarity is at stake then Fesko nails it. As a rule of thumb, I get suspicious of ambiguity.

    Second, are the Kerux reviewers really expecting us to believe that Calvin taught the Mosaic Law was a gracious covenant? As far as I’m aware, Calvin seemed to differentiate the promissory aspects of Moses, describing them as “accidents” and “additions” to it in 2.11.4, from the Mosaic covenant itself. This seems in line with Fesko’s jump to 2.11.7. In other words, Moses was a covenant of works with gracious elements to it. It’s maybe anachronistic to speak the way Fesko did, but he seems to demonstrate that the seeds of covenant theology lay in Calvin’s nomism.

    Third, I agree with you on Kline. It’s top stuff.

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    1. Thank you for your reply Nick. So I suppose clarity is subjective? To be clear, I understood what Fesko meant the first time I read it too – what I mean by muddying the waters is that attributing a view to Calvin that Calvin did not hold will necessarily bring confusion to the debate because of all kinds of other points that follow.

      I just don’t understand what they mean about Calvin isolating the moral law in Moses.

      Really? That’s pretty standard stuff in anything I have ever read on the topic. The moral law exists apart from the Mosaic Covenant. It is the law of creation. That’s what they mean when they talk about Calvin isolating the moral law. Calvin clearly does so in the cited sections.

      For example, Fesko says:

      In other words, Calvin is not afraid to say that the Mosaic administration of the law sets forth a covenant governed by a works principle, namely, eternal life through obedience: “We cannot gainsay that the reward of eternal salvation awaits complete obedience to the law, as the Lord has promised” (2.7.3). The problem, however, with this covenant of obedience is, because of man’s sinfulness, “righteousness is taught in vain by the commandments until Christ confers it by free imputation and by the Spirit of regeneration” (2.7.2).

      So if we look to 2.7.2 and 2.7.3, we should find Calvin saying that the Mosaic Covenant promises eternal life upon obedience. But in the quote from 2.7.2 Calvin says “With regard to the Ten Commandments, we ought likewise to heed Paul’s warning… righteousness is taught in vain…” So the quote is specifically dealing with the Ten Commandments, not the Mosaic Covenant. Previously (2.7.1), Calvin said “I understand by the word “law” not only the Ten Commandments, which set forth a godly and righteous rule of living, but the form of religion handed down by God through Moses.” So Calvin makes a clear distinction between the Mosaic law as a whole, and the Ten Commandments or moral law. The quote from Calvin that Fesko uses is referring to the moral law, not to the Mosaic Covenant.

      How can someone refer to the moral law without referring to the Mosaic Covenant? Well, here is Calvin’s answer (from the same 2.7.2):

      Elsewhere he teaches that “the law was put forward because of transgressions” [Gal 3:19]; that is, in order to humble men, having convinced them of their own condemnation. But because this is the true and only preparation for seeking Christ, all his variously expressed teachings well agree. He was disputing with perverse teachers who pretended that we merit righteousness by the works of the law. Consequently, to refute their error he was sometimes compelled to take the bare law in a narrow sense, even though it was otherwise graced with the covenant of free adoption. (Which Calvin identifies as the Mosaic covenant – see 2.7.1)

      And again, going on, Fesko’s quote from 2.7.3 is under the heading “(We cannot fulfill the moral law, 3-5). So Calvin is very clear that he is referring to the isolated, “bare law in a narrow sense” apart from the Mosaic Covenant when he says “the reward of eternal salvation awaits complete obedience to the law.” Fesko chose to ignore this and weave it in such a way as to suggest Calvin agreed with the thesis of TLNF – that the Mosaic Covenant offered eternal life on the condition of personal obedience.

      Finally, if we look at Fesko’s last citation of Calvin, we again find Calvin discussing this “bare law in a narrow sense” and not the Mosaic Covenant (as Fesko claims by weaving together a quote from 2.11.4 that is not related to 2.11.7):

      …the law contains here and there promises of mercy, but because they have been borrowed from elsewhere, they are not counted part of the law, when only the nature of the law is under discussion.
      2.11.7

      Now, isolating the moral law may not make sense to you – but it is what Calvin taught. As I’ve already said, I don’t entirely agree with Calvin – but that doesn’t mean I should change what Calvin said to make him agree with me.

      Second, are the Kerux reviewers really expecting us to believe that Calvin taught the Mosaic Law was a gracious covenant?

      Yes, they are. Because that is what Calvin very clearly believed.

      Moses was not made a lawgiver to wipe out the blessing promised to the race of Abraham. Rather, we see him repeatedly reminding the Jews of that freely given covenant made with their fathers of which they were the heirs. It was as if he were sent to renew it.
      2.7.1

      Book 2 Chapter 10 is titled “The Similarity of the Old and New Testaments” and the subtitle of the first section is “The covenant in the Old Testament really the same as that of the New)

      Now we can clearly see from what has already been said that all men adopted by God into the company of his people since the beginning of the world were covenanted to him by the same law and by the bond of the same doctrine as obtains among us.
      2.10.1

      The covenant made with all the patriarchs is so much like ours in substance and reality that the two are actually one and the same. Yet they differ in the mode of dispensation…
      …the covenant by which they were bound to the Lord was supported, not by their own merits, but solely by the mercy of God, who called them.
      2.10.2

      Indeed, the apostle makes the Israelites equal to us no only in the grace of the covenant but also in the signification of the sacraments.
      2.10.5

      As far as I’m aware, Calvin seemed to differentiate the promissory aspects of Moses, describing them as “accidents” and “additions” to it in 2.11.4, from the Mosaic covenant itself.

      You have this exactly backwards. Calvin said the promissory aspects were not the accidentals, but the substance of the Mosaic Covenant. Note: “If the comparison had reference to the substance of the promises, then there would be great disagreement between the Testaments.” And

      While such confirmation (Christ) was awaited, the Lord appointed, through Moses, ceremonies that were, so to speak, solemn symbols of that confirmation. A controversy arose over whether or not the ceremonies that had been ordained in the law ought to give way to Christ. Now these were only the accidental properties of the covenant, or additions and appendages, and in common parlance, accessories of it.

      Even Fesko knows that “Third, given Israel’s underage status and the need to deal with them in simple terms, the ceremonies of the law were “accidental properties of the covenant, or additions and appendages, and in common parlance, accessories of it. (31)”

      This seems in line with Fesko’s jump to 2.11.7. In other words, Moses was a covenant of works with gracious elements to it.

      No it does not. See above. Calvin is very clear that in 2.11.7 he is not talking about the Mosaic Covenant, but of the bare nature of the law. Note how both you and Fesko have to say “in other words” because you just can’t find Calvin saying what you want himself. He very clearly says the opposite. You may not agree with Calvin, but try to refrain from interpreting him to be saying what makes sense to you. Just say he was wrong and point out how you disagree.

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      1. Anonymous

        Brandon:

        Thanks for your careful analysis of Calvin, and your clear, point for point analysis of the issues. You are giving the blogosphere a good example of what it means to carefully look to the sources for yourself, and not just follow the opinions of secondary sources (including the Heidelblog).

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      2. Nick Mackison

        Brandon, sorry to come back so late on this, I’ve been on holiday and forgot about this discussion. I think you’re probably correct on this. As I said over at the HB, I’m no expert on this and am merely feeling my way. The writing style of Calvin is cumbersome and I find it difficult to discern what he’s saying much of the time. I suppose I was trying to give Fesko the benefit of the doubt, given RSC’s disdain of the Kerux review.

        So, in sum, I think Calvin is wrong about the law of Moses and Fesko interpreted him incorrectly. (I suspect RSC agrees)

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    2. Anonymous

      Even Fesko acknowledges that Calvin distinguishes between the moral law and the Mosaic covenant. The KERUX authors even note this:

      “When one explores Calvin’s understanding of the function of the law, he must therefore carefully distinguish whether he has the moral law or the law as the Mosaic covenant in mind” (Fesko in TNLF, 28).

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  2. Brandon, thank you for your careful research.

    The man who lent me his copy of TLNF told me: “I don’t fully agree the authors of these essays, but they’re on the right track.” As far as I can tell, he holds a view similar to Owen’s. Adding your comments to his, I’m becoming a little suspicious about TLNF, especially since I don’t have the resources to check their references.

    Since my copy of Dr. Crampton’s new book just arrived, I’m wondering if I should set aside TLNF and read it instead…

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    1. Definitely give Crampton’s book a read. It’s a quick read, so you can get back to TLNF when you’re done. I’ve got a series of posts I’m working on from Crampton’s book.

      As for being suspicious of TLNF – I sent R. S. Clark a link to this and asked him for correction. He replied with ad hominem and non sequitars arguments against Kerux. He did nothing but confirm what I wrote here.
      http://heidelblog.wordpress.com/2009/12/24/considering-the-source-2/#comment-22652

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  3. On a side-note to anyone who is interested: This post got me banned from the Heidelblog. I asked R. Scott Clark about it and this is what he said:

    I banned you because you were unreasonable re republication. Why on earth are you wasting your time on the HB? I don’t have time to have fruitless arguments. I’m running pillar to post 12+ hours a day.

    If you think the KERUX review was reasonable we have nothing to discuss because we have radically different definitions of “reasonable.”

    I’m a historian. I have to deal in facts.The facts are that there have been a variety of views in Reformed orthodoxy on republication but virtually every Reformed theologian taught some version of it in the 16th and 17th centuries. That’s why that entire episode was so bizarre. It was as if there was no Reformed tradition.

    Republication, even the version that says that Israel kept the land/national status essentially on the basis of congruent merit is not Pelagian. That’s just silly. I can’t have that conversation.

    I don’t really care what people think Calvin said about republication. Historically it’s like asking what he thought about jets. It’s a non-starter.

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  4. markmcculley

    What is Fesko going to do if he can’t find Calvin teaching “the covenant of works”? What God commanded Adam to do (obey and live) is not what God the Son came to do (obedience unto death) . The two Adams are different. Christ is not doing what Adam ” could have done”.

    Click to access 2009-442-226.pdf

    Engelsma–Highlighting the difference between Hoeksema and the men of the Federal Vision is the fact that, although they deny that Adam could have merited higher, eternal life, the advocates of the Federal Vision allow that Adam might, nevertheless, have obtained the higher life for himself and the race by “maturing” into that life through his obedience. Hoeksema would have condemned this notion as heartily as he did the notion of earning. The appeal to Hoeksema’s rejection of the covenant of works by the men of the Federal Vision is mistaken because Hoeksema’s fundamental objection against the covenant of works was different from that of the proponents of the Federal Vision. Hoeksema’s objection held against Adam’s obtaining higher life for himself and the human race in any manner whatever. Viewing the covenant with Adam in light of God’s eternal decree to glorify Himself by realizing His covenant in Jesus Christ, Hoeksema insisted that only the Son of God in human flesh could obtain the higher and better heavenly and eternal life for Himself and elect humanity, in the way of His cross and resurrection.

    Click to access nov2006.pdf

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