THE EIGHTH VOLUME IN BERKOUWER’S 14-VOLUME “STUDIES IN DOGMATICS”
Gerrit Cornelis Berkouwer (1903-1996) taught systematic theology at the Free University in Amsterdam. The other volumes in this series are: The Providence of God,Faith and Sanctification,Faith and Justification,The Person of Christ,General Revelation,Faith and Perseverance,Divine Election,The Work of Christ,The Sacraments,Sin,The Return of Christ,Holy Scriptures,The Church. He also wrote books such as The Second Vatican Council and the New Catholicism,Modern Uncertainty and Christian Faith,Recent Developments in Roman Catholic Thought,A Half Century of Theology: Movements and Motives, etc.
He wrote in the first chapter of this 1957 book, “Today, more than at any time, the question “What is man?’ is at the center of theological and philosophical concern… Why should this be a PROBLEM? It would seem that there is nothing so widely and generally ‘known’ in everyday experience as is man… Is not this ‘nature’ experienced by all of us, in ourselves and in others, in countless relationships, in the heights of human happiness and the depths of grief? Who does not ‘know’ man, whom we daily encounter, and the man that we ourselves are? There can only be one answer to such questions; namely, that this almost irresistible problem appears to many a mind NOT to have found a clear and obviously irrefutable answer, and that this apparently general ‘knowledge’ of the nature of man is not so obvious after all… Hence it does not appear, on second thought, to be at all clear and obvious WHO and WHAT man really is, and there is thus every reason to pose the problem.” (Pg. 9)
He explains, “we may conclude that theological concern with the image of God has concentrated on the so-called dual character of the image, and especially on the question of whether we can correctly speak of the image when man’s conformity to God’s will has vanished. Some would say that man’s humanness, his humanity… as such is part of the image… The point at issue is thus the relationship between … man’s humanness, and the image of God.” (Pg. 57)
He states, “Thus we can hardly see anthropomorphism as something which clouds our view of God, which should be conquered and surpassed, in order to gain a more ‘spiritual’ view of God. We should rather see it as a manner of speaking which gives full perspective to our view of the living and active God, though we must never forget that this manner of speaking is and must always be inadequate. And hence it is not the danger that God will be anthropomorphically compared to some part of man (e.g., his body)… but rather the danger that unlimited use of it might be wrongly understood in the context of the religious ideas of the heathen world surrounding Israel.” (Pg. 80)
He argues, “Thus we can evaluate contemporary personalism which applied to the image as a reaction against the dangers of an abstract ontology. As such, it is a constant reminder of these dangers; but it should at the same time be stated that this personalism itself operated with the concept of relation which does not sufficiently recognize that a being in relation should not underemphasize reality, but rather becomes evidenced in reality… in this relation we do confront the actuality and reality of man’s nature, which even in its corruption has not escaped from God’s hand, but rather stands guilty in every corner of his being, while in this relation.” (Pg. 140)
He explains, “‘common grace’ limits the powers of evil. This common grace may be brought into relation with the grace of Christ in this sense, that this protection of man’s humanness provides OPPORTUNITY for man to have salvation through Christ; but it is as such nevertheless not Christologically defined or limited. It is a holding back of sin which can lead to a relative but nevertheless striking conformity, which surely is not without meaning in the light of God’s intentions, but which can never in the least degree excuse man in the total alienation of his life from God.” (Pg. 155)
He suggests, “Conscience is thus not a limit on that corruption which alienates man from God in the very depths of his being. The reaction against evil, in the sense of protest even to the extent of self-accusation, may show that man is not withdrawn from the holiness and goodness of the ever-present commandments of God, but it does not break through man’s alienation from God, and presents no solution which can restore life’s harmony. Conscience is thus not in the least an unassailable ‘light of nature,’ but an indication of a disharmony; of a denigration, in which the unity of life appears to be lost, and in which man---in spite of himself---accuses himself.” (Pg. 176)
He points out, “Common humanity: the words can be lightly used and be made into a theory which today is hardly taken seriously in actual life; but this fact does not invalidate their richness and deepest meaning. Man is---even when alienated from God---not alone. In considering the estate of fallen man, there is indeed more reason for us to reflect on this social component than on the preservation of his understanding and will. For surely this breaking through the bonds of isolation, full of continuing enrichment and responsibility, can hardly be due merely to a remnant of individual endowments. Such a ‘remnant’ might explain a certain legality and outward conformity to the law, but not the development in the course of the life of fallen man of these truly surprising relationships.” (Pg. 183)
He states, “We have already remarked… that Scripture, to use the terms of dichotomy, takes not only the soul but also the body, very seriously. This affirmation of the body’s worth has always been a [scandal] to every dualistic theory of gradation between higher and lower elements in man. One of the most valuable possessions of the early Church was its confession of the resurrection of the body, against all tendencies to devalue the body… This eschatological affirmation is indissolubly related to the whole New Testament witness regarding the salvation of man.” (Pg. 230)
He comments, “it is also clear why Scripture does not take up this continued existence and the ‘immortality of the soul’ as an independent theme, a fact which impresses those who approach Scripture from a belief in general immortality as being ‘strange.’ The basic reason for this fact… is, that this continued existence as such is never preached as a comfort, an immortality which man might deduce from the structure of his being, a comfort which he could seek and find against approaching death. Scripture shows us no way through which death loses its serious character… Such a comfort is ruled out, since true comfort can lie only in the overcoming of death, in an overpowering annihilation of death in all perspectives… This is something radically different from the sort of escape from death which is implied in the idea of the immortality of the soul.” (Pg. 268)
He says, “The New Testament revelation regarding freedom this articulates a deeply religious verdict. Every concept of freedom which would describe man’s essence ontologically, apart from his relation to God, must end with the ‘freedom’ of autonomy and self-determination. Such an abstract ontology of essences can give no true perspective on freedom; it must always designate as the earmark of freedom, being ‘free from’… This freedom… is then seen as the ‘essence’ of man, a self-sufficient inwardness which protests all threats to it or limits on it, all conquest and compulsion. Freedom is then defined by man’s dignity and by his inner nature. This freedom leaves man to himself, and he chooses so to be, as over against the world of the other, which limits him and threatens him… Freedom is thus formally qualified, and from this point of view any limit or responsibility will be seen as a relativizing of absolute freedom.” (Pg. 327) He adds, “Here… there is a consciousness of impregnability, of legitimacy, of the true nature of man which is revealed in its freedom as a ‘being free for’ and therein also as a ‘being free from.’ This concept of freedom can no longer be called formal, for it is completely concretized in actual life.” (Pg. 330)
He summarizes, “if we … seek a synthesis between the freedom given by God and a formal freedom, the freedom to choose evil, we shall inevitably fail in this dualistic concept of freedom, for the choice of sin perverts and does not reveal a free will. And our unsuccessful striving for such a synthesis can be based only on a concept of neutral ‘freedom’ as part of the essence of man. If we do not abstract man’s essence, and thus also his creaturely freedom, from God, if we do not see freedom as a release for arbitrary choice, then we shall not wish nor be able to combine true freedom and … the enslaved will… We can never see freedom as a gift of God if we begin with such an arbitrary ‘free’ will.” … And man is so completely under the delusion of this arbitrary free will that it takes a lifetime to become accustomed to the light of genuine freedom… For the law and the gospel take man away from the illusion of the crossroads at which he supposes he can choose either way arbitrarily. They break through the darkness of the ‘indifferent will,’ and the delusion which continually obsesses man on the path of sin.” (Pg. 347-348)
For anyone interested in conservative Reformed theology, this entire series will be of great interest. The diversity of the theologians and sources with whom Berkouwer interacts make this series a very stimulating reading project.