The Christian’s Highest Good. Douglas Vickers

The Christian’s Highest Good - Douglas Vickers


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concerned with God than with man’s consciousness of God. The shadow of what is known as ‘psychologism’ lies over all his work,” ibid., 94, and “[Schleiermacher] put discovery in place of revelation, the religious consciousness in the place of the Word of God, and the ‘not yet’ of imperfection in the place of sin,” ibid., 100.

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      The Identity and Offices of Christ

      The gospel of the grace of God in the redemption of sinners emanates from the council of the Godhead before the foundation of the world. Its design is grounded in the redemptive offices of the Persons of the Godhead as declared in the eternal Covenant of Redemption. That covenant implies that no more ultimate explanation of the course of human affairs exists than that of the sovereign will and decree of God, executed in his works of creation, providence, and redemption. And no more ultimate explanation spans human history than that of which the coming and the redemptive accomplishment of Christ is the watershed. At the turning point of the history of the church the apostle Peter stated to the incredulous crowd that it was “by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God” that the remarkable events they had witnessed had occurred (Acts 2:23). And when the newly assembled people of God raised their prayer for the disciples, Peter and John, who had been falsely arrested, they acknowledged that the authorities in their malevolence had done “whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done” (Acts 4:28). At the heart of the gospel stands the declaration that God “worketh all things after the counsel of his own will” (Eph 1:11).

      But the covenantal structure of Christian thought and the sovereignty of God in salvation have been substantially betrayed in our time. While that is so, it is true, of course, that a serious and prominent examination of historic covenantal theology has been maintained in the context of Reformed theological witness. Among the most recent offerings, K. Scott Oliphint’s Covenantal Apologetics has set out to make a significant advance on the level of apologetic witness.28 Theologians Bryan D. Estelle, F. V. Fesko, and David VanDrunen have forced a new examination of the respects in which the Mosaic covenant, while it is to be understood as a form of administration of the covenant of grace, exhibits a works principle and, indeed, has been referred to by a long line of Reformed theologians as partaking of elements of the covenant of works.29 But in the contemporary evangelical-theological context, the church’s doctrinal formation finds its determinative nexus too often in its focus on man and his supposed capacities, intellectual and ethical, to the neglect of the biblical explanation of his fallen condition. For that reason, the objective realities of God’s implementation of his covenantal purposes in the salvation of the elect people he gave to his Son to redeem (John 17:6, 9) have not found a ready place or served as the orientation of thought. The biblical data that state that we are all the fallen children of Adam are only lightly handled. While the imputation to us of the guilt of Adam’s sin extends its disastrous deposit to the fact that we come into the world with a fallen nature, that fact does not find a ready place in the most common evangelical expressions.

      Any


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