Paul Helm lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, and teaches at Regent College. He holds the position of “teaching fellow in theology and philosophy” (IVP, “Paul Helm”). According to one biography, “[He] was educated at Worcester College, Oxford” (Banner Authors “Paul Helm”). His work, The Providence of God, is not his only academic contribution to the doctrine of God’s sovereignty. He has additionally contributed chapters to Divine Foreknowledge: Four Views and God and Time: Four Views (IVP). Having written extensively on this particular doctrine, Helm offers a thorough perspective on the relationship between God’s sovereignty and human responsibility, and he give his clear view on the relationship specifically in The Providence of God.
In the brief introduction to his work, Helm quickly clarifies his position of God’s providence as “the ‘no-risk’ view of divine providence” which he contends for throughout the book (15). However, he desires serious assessment and critique of his position from those who read his work (16). In the first chapter, Helm explains the relevance of the doctrine of God’s providence and gives the reader a concise definition of the doctrine (17–18). He reveals that his volume is structured under the categories of “whom God provides for, what he provides, and how he provides it” (18), and then explains God’s providential care of the universe—which certainly includes all people (see p. 21). Additionally, he introduces the reader to multiple questions that arise when one considers God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility (26), and concludes the chapter with a rebuttal to those who deny God’s action and providential work in the universe (34–37).
In the second chapter, Helm explains “risk” and “no-risk” views of God’s providence in greater depth. He helpfully interacts with various positions on divine sovereignty and human responsibility—including William Lane Craig’s argument for middle knowledge and J. I. Packer’s argument for the antinomy. Despite the conciseness of the assessments of these positions, Helm is still able to make observations about the strengths and weaknesses of each view. Helm himself adheres to the compatibilist view of God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility (66–68).
Whereas the second chapter’s primary focus was different approaches to God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility, the third chapter’s primary focus is the different approaches to God’s involvement in the world. The different approaches presented in the chapter are those of pantheism, deism, and theism. For Helm, “[pantheism] is not acceptable to the Christian because it denies the distinction between God and the universe” (72). A distinction between God and his creation is fundamental to the Christian worldview. The important role of miracles and prayer in the Christian worldview also render Deism insufficient for the Christian (75–79). The shortcomings of these views lead Helm to contend for the theistic view of God’s involvement in the world. This view contends for “God’s immanence and transcendence” which Helm understands as “his providential rule of his universe” (90, italics mine).
In chapter four, Helm’s focal concern is God’s providential care in the history of the world. Helm observes that “the Christian idea of providence may be said to give us the rudiments of a philosophy of history. For as providence has a course, so does history – not only the history of redemption but the history of the entire human civilization” (118). This observation leads him to conclude that “it does imply a teleological view of history, even though the telos is found outside history, in the purpose of God” (118). In other words, the doctrine of God’s providence is fundamental for understanding that history is working towards a final purpose.
The central issue of the fifth chapter is “how divine providence affects the life of the Christian” (121). While he recognizes that the problem of evil in the Christian life naturally and inevitably arises from his “no-risk” view of providence (133), he is still careful to defend against “disadvantageous” and fatalistic charges that critics level against his view (138), as well as “flattening arguments” (141). His solution to fatalistic charges is recognizing “that not only the ends are ordained by God but also the means to those ends” (139). Means in life matter as they accomplish ends, but both are ordained by God.
In many ways, chapter six and its focus on prayer is also concerned with the Christian life (121). In keeping with his deterministic view of means and ends, Helm contends that “if anyone prays, then God has ordained the prayer. The praying is thus an action in the order of divine providence like any other action” (154). God ordains Christian prayers as “means to accomplish those ends. Now in some cases, in God’s wisdom, the means include people warrantably asking him to do certain things” (157). While this is a deterministic view of prayer, Helm believes that prayer actually accomplishes things in the Christian life.
Helm dedicates chapter seven to the problem of man’s responsibility under God’s deterministic sovereignty. Pertinent to the chapter’s focus is an assessment of God’s relationship to evil and the positions or “models” that attempt to resolve the problems in this relationship. Helm comes to a uniquely compatibilist conclusion regarding God’s relationship to evil: “According to Scripture, there is an important asymmetry between acts of moral evil and acts of goodness…God ordains evil but he does not intend evil as evil…In the case of goodness, God not only ordains the goodness, he is the author of it” (190). His solution to the problem of evil is to posit a disconnect between the relationship God has with goodness and the relationship he has with evil. Chapter eight delves further into the problem of evil, as well as “Some consequences for the problem of evil” (197). He examines the punative and non-punative solutions to the problem of evil and assesses the strengths and shortcomings of each solution as he does with all the positions he assesses throughout the book. He closes chapter eight with an assessment of the “greater-good defence” as a solution to the problem of evil and the major weakness of the “incompatibilist view of free will” in its solution to the problem of evil (215–216).
In the final chapter, Helm focuses on issues already familiar in his work. He once again defends his position from charges of fatalism and explains what he means by “God’s weakness in providence” (224–228). He concludes his work by explaining God’s good purposes in evil and the necessity of believers “recognizing that the evil that they and others experience has been sent” by God himself (231). God sovereignly uses and sends evil “for [the believer’s] good” (231).
Helm has a fourfold purpose in writing this book. First, he seeks to “put forward the ‘no-risk’ view of divine providence” (15) and develop this view thoroughly. The degree to which he accomplishes this purpose is tied to the second purpose of the book—to study God’s providence through the lens of the “three contexts of divine providence” (21). These three contexts are “the interests of the individual Christian, with the interests of all Christians – the Christian church – and with the interests of the whole of the creation animate and inanimate.” These three contexts are fundamental for Helm’s study of the doctrine as “No account of divine providence can afford to neglect any one of these contexts, or the relationship between them” (21). Approaching the doctrine in this way allows Helm to develop and defend his “no-risk” view of God’s providence in a holistic manner, and so he accomplishes the first purpose of explaining his view.
Helm consistently follows his second purpose of examining God’s providence under the three contexts of the Christian, the church, and the universe. For example, chapter 3 focuses on God’s providence in the universe (69). Chapter four is “concerned with the second context – the need of reconciliation with God, and the provision of reconciliation through Christ” (93). Chapter five approaches the doctrine according to the first context (121). While he does not examine each of these contexts in the order that he initially lists them, he still gives great space to the three contexts in the book.
His third purpose of explaining “whom God provides for, what he provides, and how he provides it” (18) is not accomplished as directly and as straightforwardly as his approaching the doctrine of God’s providence under the three contexts. Nevertheless, the three contexts reveal “whom God provides for.” Two particular chapters, “Providence: Risky or Risk Free?” and “Reckoning with Providence” reveal how God provides. His chapters on “Providence and Guidance” and “Providence and Evil” explain to the reader what God provides for believers. Therefore, Helm successfully structures his book under these categories.
His fourth purpose for writing is directed toward the reader. Writing on divine sovereignty and human responsibility, Helm is adamant in stating that “Readers may care to work out for themselves which if any of these models ought to be preferred, whether there are other more persuasive models, and whether or not any of them could be fruitfully combined together” (183). While he makes this point specifically about human responsibility and its relationship to God’s sovereignty, his purpose and desire is for readers to decide for themselves what position they will hold to on the various issues related to God’s providence. This desire for the reader to choose his or her own position leads him to present the various models or viewpoints of each issue in the doctrine. Examples of Helm fulfilling this purpose is his presentation of the various views of God’s sovereignty (55–68), and God’s relationship to evil (203–215). The presentation of various models that pertain to the doctrine of God’s providence is also a strength of Helm’s work as the reader is not merely presented with a one-sided work. Helm is not interested in merely stating his own view. Instead, he desires the reader to be fully informed about the doctrine, and this means informing the reader on all views of God’s providence. The believer who reads this book will finish it well-informed about the doctrine.
His fifth and final purpose for writing is considered by Helm to be “The overall aim in this book,” and that aim “is to make an accurate study of God’s activity now” (94). Elsewhere, Helm writes, “Far from studying what is static or abstract, we are to be concerned with God’s action in our world, and with how, according to Scripture, that activity is carried out” (17). Helm’s primary purpose is to show the believer how God’s providence is relevant in day-to-day life. His emphasis and focus on the three contexts of God’s providence—especially as these contexts pertain to all people—carries out this primary aim well. This desire to reveal the relevance of God’s providence to believers is also a notable strength of Helm’s work as he shows the reader why understanding the workings of God’s providence in all things matters. Such an emphasis on the relevance of this doctrine makes the book a fundamental read for any believer who does consider the doctrine to be “static” or “abstract.”
Despite his desire to avoid fatalism, a notable weakness in Helm’s work is that some of his arguments veer towards his personal definition of fatalism. His unintentional leaning towards fatalism can be observed in chapter five: “It would be fatalistic only if God decreed ends without decreeing any or all of the means to those ends, or if God’s will was itself fated” (138–139, emphasis added). Yet, before explaining fatalism as God’s fated will, he insists, “This doctrine of providence, then, has the consequence that no human decision can change the divine will in any respect. What God has ordained will come to pass” (138). Following his somewhat obscure definition of fatalism as God’s will being fated, does his insistence on the inevitability of God’s will taking place make that exact point? The distinction between Helm’s definition of fatalism and his very definition of God’s providence remains unclear.
Helm writes this book for inquiring theologians and students desiring to learn about God’s providence. Having this audience in mind as he writes, Helm’s work is not overly accessible to lay readers. Some lay readers will find his chapters on the problem of evil to be fairly dense and not written in the most accessible manner. Therefore, his book is not intended for the lay person but for students and theologians.
Helm is biased towards a compatibilist view of divine sovereignty and human responsibility. However, he holds to a view of compatiblism that “favours deterministic freedom” (67). Helm goes so far as to argue for “the compatibilist view of human freedom and determinism which I believe most naturally coheres with it” (67). This argument for and bias toward both compatibilist freedom and deterministic freedom makes Helm’s work a unique work. Despite his bias toward this position, Helm desires overall “that readers make up their own minds in the light of the evidence presented to them” (67). While he has a bias toward a particular position, he doesn’t want this to influence the reader too much.