My approach in this review will not be to offer a page-by-page assessment of every argument, but to address some general issues that deserve to be raised.
Often, DW offers undefended exegetical assertions in the place of close observance to the actual text. His appeal to 1 Cor 7:14, for example, while certainly a popular prooftext for infant inclusion in the CoG, is particularly unsatisfying. He takes the reference to the holiness of unbelieving spouse and child to be a covenantal holiness. Unfortunately for the curious reader, DW does not at all discuss the fact that not only children are included in the CoG on the basis of the faith of a parent—so is the unbelieving spouse. According to this view, if the mother in a pagan family of 3 is converted by the gospel, not only her children have a right to baptism, but the unbelieving husband does as well. It’s easy to ignore this fact and say that “it wouldn’t make sense” to baptize sometime that you would immediately have to excommunicate. But this misses the point, since the sacrament follows covenant inclusion—if holiness here means federal sanctification, there is no grounds on which an unbelieving husband of a believing wife could be refused baptism. And why shouldn’t he be? Is the stern “grace of discipline” not real for these apostate members as it would be for apostate teenagers who had been brought up in a Christian home?
While it does remove an often-repeated argument from the toolbelt of Reformed p/bs, we may say thankfully that Paul has nothing of this covenantal absurdity in mind when he speaks of the holiness of unbelieving spouses or children. The clear context is 1st century converts to the Christian religion who wonder, “Do I need to now put away my unbelieving spouse and unbelieving child, exactly as Israel had to do?”
”The people of Israel...have not separated themselves from the peoples of the lands with their abominations, from the Canaanites, [etc]. For they have taken some of their daughters to be wives for themselves and for their sons, so that the holy race has mixed itself with the peoples of the lands...Therefore let us…put away all these wives and their children, according to the counsel of my lord and of those who tremble at the commandment of our God, and let it be done according to the Law.” (Ezra 9:1-2; 10:3)
The Christians of the first century are in an analogous position to Israel after the exile—does the New Covenant view those outside the covenant, as the Canaanites, et. al. were outside and opposed to the Old Covenant, as illegitimate, and thus obligate the annulment and disowning of those relationships, as Israel was committed to do by law (Deut 7:2,3; Josh 23:12-13; 1 K 11:2)? I will allow a few Reformed orthodox to answer the question:
Camerarius: “The unbelieving husband hath been sanctified – that is, sanctified in the lawful use of marriage. For without this, the apostle says, the children would be unclean; that is, infamous, not being legitimate. Thus they are holy; that is, during the marriage, they are free from every spot of ignominy.”
Musculus: “I have sometimes abused the present place against the error of Anabaptists, keeping back infants of Christians from baptism…Yet the present place makes nothing to this cause, in which the sanctimony of the covenant and people is not meddled with, but the cleanness of lawful marriage, even of infidels: for not only to children, to whom perhaps the holiness of a believing parents may so appertain, but also to unbelieving husbands and wives is sanctimony ascribed, although they oppose the Christian faith.”
Likewise, DW’s appeal to the Olive Tree of Rom 11 is similarly unfruitful for his arguments. I will not enter here into a full-fledged exegetical examination of Rom 11, but the gist of the p/b argument is that Christ is the root of the tree, Jews were members of the tree through the Old Covenant and are removed, and that this possibility remains in the New Covenant. It is simply the application of a “one substance, two administrations” understanding of the CoG, which supports the further distinction between an outward administration and an inward administration (one can be a member of the CoG externally, but not achieve to its essence). However, what Paul is dealing with here specifically is the place of the natural descendants of Abraham (“Israelites, descendants of Abraham,” Rom 11:1, Paul’s “kinsmen according to the flesh” Rom 9:3). The Olive Tree is one of the most common symbols in Scripture for the nation of Israel, Abraham’s physical offspring (Is 5; Jer 11:16–17; Luke 13:6–9). So first, it should be noted that, while it is not the Sunday School answer, the “root” of the Israel tree is not Jesus, but Abraham and the Patriarchs—as the federal head of the “covenant of circumcision” (Acts 7:8), Abraham is consistently treated as the starting point of Israel (“Look to the rock from which you were hewn, and to the quarry from which you were dug. Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who bore you,” Is 51:2). So the question is, what happens to the Israel tree in the NC? What Paul is dealing with is the transition from the OC, Israel, the typical people of God, natural descendants of Abraham, to the NC, spiritual Israel, the antitypical people of God, the spiritual offspring of Abraham.
What is amazing is that a partial preterist can read nearly every NT text in light of AD70, but then ignore this reality in Rom 11. Paul is speaking here of the historical event of the culling of the tree of Israel. The axe is laid to the root of Israel according to the flesh. If a Jew wants to continue living on the Israel tree, he needs to remain “by faith.” Having Abraham as one’s physical father is the definition of growing naturally on the Olive Tree, symbolic of Israel, but Israel the shadow, the type, is dissolving before the reality, the anti-type. So this is not a perpetual description of what it means to be united to Christ—this is a particular event in the history of redemption when the NC is taking the place of the OC, and the slave woman is cast out. Thus, the natural children of believing Gentiles are nowhere included in the Olive Tree. And why would they? They have no relation to Abraham, as either his physical offspring, or his spiritual offspring by faith. They belong neither on the typical tree, nor the true tree of Israel.
As for the warning of vv. 20-22, this should not be understood as opening the door to participation in the CoG from which one can then fall away. Again, the historical moment is crucial. Paul is warning his readers that inclusion in true Israel depends on faith and faith alone, and for those who presume to live on the “Israel tree” as unbelieving Jews legitimately lived throughout the time of the typical existence of physical Israel, the same historical judgment is soon to fall on them that the Israelites are soon to experience. The only connection to true Israel is faith—the connection to typical Israel is about to be destroyed.
Paul speaks not to visible saints merely, who may or may not have the true possession of faith—he speaks to Gentiles added to the tree not by mere profession or appearance (much less by baptism), but by belief, by true faith (v. 20). This faith cannot be lost, so the warning cannot exist to introduce the uncertainty of one’s faith, but rather, to encourage the humility and faith by which those who are connected to the tree by faith need to persevere. Hear Calvin:
“The fear of which he speaks is set up as an antidote to proud contempt; for as every one claims for himself more than what is right, and becomes too secure and at length insolent towards others, we ought then so far to fear, that our heart may not swell with pride and elate itself.”
But it seems that he throws in a doubt as to salvation, since he reminds them to beware lest they also should not be spared. To this I answer, — that as this exhortation refers to the subduing of the flesh, which is ever insolent even in the children of God, he derogates nothing from the certainty of faith.”
The exhortation is for the fostering of the faith which grafts one into the tree, which is, as Calvin asserts, certain. Paul nowhere refers to a wild branch that was once grafted into the Olive Tree but has now been cut off.
I will more briefly pass over what I consider to be the mishandling of a number of other texts (e.g. Acts 2, 1 Cor 10, Rom 4, and Heb 10), all of which are, in my opinion, misused for the purpose to which p/bs set them up. The promise of Acts 2 is simply a conditional promise of salvation first for the Jew (“you and your children”) then for the Gentile (“and all whom the Lord our God calls...”), dependent on faith. Heb. 10:29 refers to the sanctification, not of unbelieving apostates, but of the NC itself (gk. ἐν ᾧ ἡγιάσθη), sanctified by “better blood.” 1 Cor 10 refers to Christ’s presence as historia salutis, not ordo salutis. In Rom 4, circ is a sign and seal to Abraham, as a confirmation of the blessings previously offered to him not a theological description of the nature of circ in itself (see Coxe, 134–137).
But turning from the exegetical to the theological, another argument I consider to be in error involves not baptism, but circumcision. In fact, at times, I think DW is more mistaken on the nature and function of circ than he is on baptism. DW’s basic understanding of circumcision, on the grounds of which he considers it a gospel ordinance of the CoG, is that circ referred to spiritual realities beyond itself. More to the point, circ signifies spiritual and covenantal association with Jesus Christ. For example, he says, “They circumcised their children into Christ” (33). “The sign of the covenant [circumcision]...signified the heart condition that would make the keeping of this external covenant possible. Simply stated, physical circumcision was given as a sign of Christ” (42). “[Circumcision was] on both of them [Jacob and Esau] a seal of the coming Christ, the coming Righteousness.” Etc.
Now all this is an unfortunate non sequitur. Of course circ pointed to spiritual realities, namely the need to be circumcised in heart. But the signification of the necessity for one to be regenerate in no way entails that regeneration is thereby offered. Of course Israel’s hearts had to be circumcised. The law was given to reveal this fact, and it was no secret. But the obvious truth is that the Old Covenant itself did not provide the means within itself to accomplish this necessity (2 Cor 3:7, all the Old Testament prophets, etc.). The administration of a sacramental condition—“this refers to the necessity of becoming circumcised in heart”—by no means implies the offer on the basis of that administration that the condition will be divinely secured. In short, the proclamation of a spiritual condition does not entail the proclamation of an unconditional blessing.
Circumcision pointed to the need for Israel’s perfection (the obligation to keep the whole law, Galatians 5:3), but did not of itself present the free gift of that perfect law-keeping in Christ. However, this is simply assumed by DW throughout the book, in order to make circ a gospel ordinance, instead of an ordinance of the law. From there, the features of the Old Testament ordinance can be ported into the New Testament gospel ordinance—believing and unbelieving Jewish children received the sign of Christ (goes the argument), so believing and unbelieving children of Christians should also receive the sign of Christ. Incidentally, this also has the reverse effect of not only “evangelizing” a “legal” ordinance, but “legalizing” a “gospel” ordinance. Thus baptism is not merely a grace-delivering sign of one’s union with Christ by the free gift of faith, but it is also an obligation, a requirement, an implicit preaching of a condition that baptism signifies—not I have died and risen with Christ, but I must die and rise with Christ.
The standard Reformed covenantalism presented in the book entails a number of other inconsistencies as well. Scripture teaches that humans are represented, ultimately, by one of only two federal heads. Either we are in Adam, or we are in Christ. There is no one who is represented federally by both at once, and all are represented. Those in Adam are under the original covenant of works, and law-breakers, condemned. Those who are in Christ are inheritors of the blessings found in him—regeneration, forgiveness of sins, eternal life, etc. Classic Reformed covenantalism says that all children of believers are “in Christ”—not necessarily as regards the substance of the covenant, but at least as regards the outward administration. However, the significant error of this position is that it posits that Jesus Christ federally represents those whom he does not save. He is the personal mediator of an eternal covenant on behalf of some who are in fact reprobate. It posits that there are those who do not have the Spirit of Christ that nevertheless “belong to him” (Rom 8:9). This is not an insignificant problem for Reformed p/bs, outweighed by other positive features like “Christian parenting,” etc. The CoG is no longer the temporal outworking of the eternal covenant within the Godhead to elect and save sinners—rather, in the CoG, Christ stands as mediator between God and some sinners who are never saved. Christ’s work as mediator of the CoG is thus reduced from actual, effectual securement of the blessings of the eternal Covenant of Redemption for the elect, to a representation before the Father on behalf of sinners who may or may not be saved from their sins. You cannot say that a child is “covenantally holy,” a true member of the CoG of which Christ is the mediator, and not abuse the mediatorial role of Christ by admitting that not every child of a believer is elect.
I see many more inconsistencies in this position, but suffice it to say, I was not convinced or swayed by the arguments in this book—I remain convinced that trad Reformed covenantalism raises many more serious issues than it can answer.
Throughout the book, I was very grateful I never felt like Pr. Wilson was dismissive of the baptist view or prideful or oversure of his p/b arguments (while obviously being convinced of them). In a few places he speaks improperly of “the baptist view” before describing a position that I, as a baptist, do not hold. But at any rate, he does not “lecture where ought to persuade,” as Barth spoke of Calvin on baptism. Though I was not persuaded, it’s obviously quite clear that DW’s goal is to convince through Scriptural arguments, and not through appeals to Reformed pedigree or historical-theological precedent alone.