Reformed
Theology's View from Eternity
Bryan Cross
June,
2007
One
of the main problems with [contemporary de facto] Reformed theology is that it attempts to look at
everything from the point of view of eternity. The "eternal decrees"
serve as the foundation on which the rest of the theology is built. Salvation,
for example, is understood fundamentally in relation to election [to glory].
That is why actual apostasy is thought to be impossible; those who 'fall away'
were faking it the whole time, and so do not actually fall away. Christ's action
on the cross is interpreted through the lens of the "eternal
decrees". Assurance is described in relation to election [to glory]. Even
the efficacy of the sacraments is determined by the doctrine of the
"eternal decrees", because "salvation" is already understood
in terms of being elected [to glory]. The effect on the sacraments of this 'view from eternity' is to undermine their efficacy. It is this, in my opinion, that makes Reformed theology intrinsically non-sacramental. The sacraments are only accidentally or stipulatively related to grace and salvation.
The Catholic Church recognizes the truth of
election to glory, but does not make this doctrine the paradigm through which
everything else must be understood. We are in time, and we necessarily see
through time; we cannot see from the point of view of eternity. We see the
divine through the human; we see God most clearly through the incarnate Christ,
through His human nature. In this way, the incarnation is the antidote to
Reformed theology's attempt to peer down from the heavens. Jesus tells Peter,
"I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you shall
bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you shall loose on earth
shall be loosed in heaven." (Matt 16:19) Notice the order of relation.
What the Church binds here on earth, shall be bound in heaven. And whatever the
Church looses here on earth, shall be loosed in heaven. Reformed theology turns
this backwards, limiting the Church to the eternal decrees, making the efficacy
of the sacraments dependent on the recipient's election [to glory] status. But
we cannot *see* from the point of view of eternity; attempts to do so result in
misconstruing it as fatalism. That is why we are not to attempt to peer down
from eternity. Rather, Jesus has given to the Church the keys of the kingdom.
Reformed theology functions as though the keys are still in heaven, as though
the Church does not *really* have them. But the Magisterium of the Church has
the authority to forgive sins: "If you forgive the sins of any, their sins
have been forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they have been
retained." (John 20:23). Jesus does
not say, "If you forgive the sins of any, then if their election
[to glory] status allows, their sins will be forgiven." If I want to know
whether I am saved, I am not to try to peer into the divine decrees, but to
look at my relation to the Church. If I want to know whether Christ's work on
the cross applies to me, I am not to try to peer into the divine decrees, but
seek to receive the sacraments. And if I want to know whether I am decretally
elect, the Church tells me I must wait until the end to find out, which makes
the status of my decretal election essentially irrelevant right now. Right now,
what I am to be concerned about is my relation to the Church; when the
Magisterium says to me, by the authorization of Christ, "Your sins are
forgiven" I can know that my sins are forgiven.