I was surprised to see this old debate between
John Piper and me linked here (or, for that matter, linked anywhere),
and I was doubly surprised to hear from Jason Pratt that several
theological sites had pointed him to Piper’s first reply while ignoring
my rejoinders and other matters. A wonderful thing about the web, I
suppose, is the access it provides to old material and how easily one
can use it to circumvent those who would try to slant material one way
or another.
In any case, I thought some here might have an
interest in my present attitude (many years later) towards this old
debate. Quite frankly, I don’t like the polemical tone of my initial
article. I originally wrote the article (several years before it was
published) for a forum at Westmont College, where a friend of mine had
asked me to make it as controversial and hard hitting as possible. He
wanted me to “stir up the troops,” so to speak. So, not surprisingly,
the article reflects a young man’s immaturity and polemical spirit.
I
now find such polemics quite distasteful, however, because they are so
obviously self-defeating. They not only deflect the reader’s attention
away from the substance of an argument; they even foster the very “us
verses them” attitude so characteristic of the most rigid
fundamentalists in all religions.
The published reactions to my
initial article illustrate the point nicely. For the principle objection
was that my argument was not biblically informed at all; it was instead
philosophically inspired and grounded in logic, a sort of non-biblical
invention of my own. Almost none of my respondents seemed even to
notice, in other words, that my principal argument was lifted (almost as
if it were plagiarized) from the New Testament itself, albeit without
the typical chapter and verse citations that some seem to relish.
Accordingly, John Piper offered “as an articulate antidote to Talbott's
nonbiblical argumentation the biblically saturated essay by Geerhardus
Vos, 'The Spiritual Doctrine of the Love of God'….” By “biblically
saturated” he evidently meant saturated with lots of specific references
to specific texts in the Bible.
But why, I continue to wonder to
this day, did he (and others) regard the argument I set forth as
non-biblical? Consider the following offhand remark that Paul made
concerning his friend and fellow worker Epaphroditus: “He was indeed so
ill that he nearly died. But God had mercy upon him, and not only on him
but on me also, so that I would not have one sorrow after another”
(Phil. 2:27). Here Paul acknowledged an important point--and the very
point I made in my article--concerning the way in which love ties
people’s interests together even as it renders a person more vulnerable
to misery and sorrow. Given Paul’s love for his friend, any good that
befell his friend would also be a good that befell Paul and any evil
that befell his friend would likewise be an evil that befell Paul.
Or
consider a more general remark that Jesus made: “as you did it to one
of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me … [and] as you did
it not to one of the least of these, you did it not to me” (Mt. 25:40
& 45). So here again we encounter the same powerful point about the
inclusive nature of love: how the interests of Jesus are so tightly
interwoven with those of his loved ones that, if we do something to
them, it is as if we have done it to him. More generally, wherever two
persons are bound together in love, their purposes and interests, even
the conditions of their happiness, are so logically intertwined as to be
inseparable. And that is why the letter of I John can declare, “Those
who say, ‘I love God,’ and hate their brothers and sisters are liars”
(4:20). For it is simply not possible to love God and, at the same time,
to hate those whom God loves. And neither, given Rebecca’s love for
Esau, would it have been possible for God to love Rebecca (not to
mention Jacob) and, at the same time, literally to hate Esau, Rebecca’s
beloved son.
Or consider, finally, Paul’s “unceasing anguish”
over the spiritual health of his beloved kin: “I have great sorrow and
unceasing anguish in my heart. For I could wish [or pray] that I myself
were accursed and cut off from Christ for the sake of my people” (Rom.
9:2-3). Nor is there anything irrational about such a wish. From the
perspective of Paul’s love, his own damnation would be no worse an evil,
and no greater threat to his own happiness, than the damnation of his
loved ones would be.
So my point is that the polemical nature of
my initial article was self-defeating for just this reason: It tended to
deflect the reader’s attention away from the fact that my central
argument, which I set forth in philosophical terms, was merely the
elaboration of an important biblical principle concerning the inclusive
nature of love.
-Tom
For additional comments from others on the exchange, click here