Doubt vs. Incredulity: Calvin on Gen. 15.1-21
Given the controversies surrounding justification in his
day, it's no surprise that Calvin camps out on Gen. 15.6 ("[Abraham] believed
the Lord, and he counted it to him as righteousness") for a significant space
of time in his commentary on the first book of the Bible. This text, after all,
figures critically in Paul's defense of justification by faith (alone) in both
Romans and Galatians (cp. Rom. 3.21-4.25 & Gal. 3.1-9). Operating (like
Paul) on the principle that "what is... related concerning [Abraham]" in Gen.
15 "is applicable to all," Calvin reflects at length on the nature and named
fruit of Abraham's faith in God's repeat promise of a spiritual seed/Seed and a
heavenly inheritance (Gen. 15.1-5; cf. Gal. 3.16).
More surprising, albeit limited, is what the Reformer says in
this context about Abraham's (and thus our own) doubt in relation to God's promise. No matter its ultimate theological import, Calvin
reads Gen. 15.6 in its immediate context, and consequently notes the rather
remarkable expression of Abraham's uncertainty
regarding God's purposes for him that occurs just two verses after we read of
Abraham's faith and its justifying fruit. When God reiterates, in Gen. 15.7,
the promise of a (heavenly) land for Abraham and his (spiritual) children (the
very promise Abraham has just believed),
Abraham responds, in Gen. 15.8, with a question which suggests something other
than complete confidence in God's ability and/or purpose to deliver on the same:
"Lord God, how am I to know that I
will possess [this]?"
One might expect Calvin to censure Abraham for this apparent
instance of doubt regarding God's promise. In fact, however, he is rather
forgiving of the Patriarch. The grace he extends to Abraham stems in part from
the observation that "the protracted delay" between God's promise and its
fulfillment "was no small obstacle to Abram's faith." It stems, I think, in
equal part from the observation that every true believer who lives between the
promise of eternal reward and its fulfillment is, like Abraham, plagued at
times by some uncertainty about the things for which he has come to hope and/or
the purpose of the One who promises those things.
In his treatment of Abraham's faith, Calvin goes out of his
way to insist that good works are antithetical to genuine belief (in the context of justification). This follows from "the mutual relation between the free promise
and faith." Insofar as forgiveness and restoration from sin are freely offered to sinners on the basis
of the promised Seed's person and work, efforts to earn forgiveness and restoration constitute insults of the highest
order. Only the worst kind of ingrate, after all, responds to the receipt of a
birthday present by pulling out his wallet and insisting upon paying the giver
for the gift.
But doubt, unlike good works, can apparently coincide with
genuine belief. Indeed, doubt can point to the existence of true faith:
"[Abraham's] questioning with God is rather a proof of faith than a sign of
incredulity." Calvin explains: "The
Lord... concedes to his children that they may freely express any objection
which comes into their mind. For he does not act so strictly with them as not
to suffer himself to be questioned. Yea, the more certainly Abram was persuaded
that God was true, and the more he was attached to His word, so much the more
familiarly did he disburden his cares into God's bosom." Of course, such an
assumption (or rather, conviction) frees believers to deal with doubt exactly
as Abraham did: taking it directly to God in prayer.
Calvin's comments on doubt in relation to faith and God's
promise are heavily informed, I suggest, by the Reformer's characteristic
sensitivity to the tender, fatherly nature of God's relationship to believers.
After all, a kind father (such as God truly is) who has guaranteed some good
(say, a trip to the sea) to his children doesn't reprimand them for unbelief
when they pester him with questions about whether and when he will deliver on
his promise. Indeed, such pestering is proof that his children nourish a proper
expectation and hope for the joy held out before them. The absence of such
pestering would point to a conviction that the promise itself was vapid, or to indifference towards the good promised, sentiments opposed to faith and hope
respectively.
If there is solace to be found in Calvin's conviction,
drawing on Abraham's example, that true (justifying) faith leaves room for
doubt, there is equal solace to be found in his observations regarding
God's response to Abraham's uncertainty. God does one better than reassure
Abraham (or us) with a further word of promise, as thoroughly sufficient as
such a word should be. God answers Abraham's doubt regarding his covenant word
with a covenant ritual, a veritable feast for Abraham's senses in which God essentially pledges himself to Self-destruction
should he fail to deliver on his promise (Gen. 15.9-21).
God's response to
Abraham's doubt is every bit as paradigmatic for present-day believers'
experience as Abraham's faith and doubt as such. "For the Lord, in order more
deeply to affect his own people, and more efficaciously penetrate their minds,
after he has reached their ears by his word, also arrests their eyes by
external symbols, that eyes and ears may consent together." The rituals by
which God confirms his word of promise to us (namely, baptism and the Lord's
Supper) may, upon the surface, seem as strange and irrelevant to our doubts as God's solution to Abraham's doubt first (perhaps) did to the Patriarch. It's unlikely, after all, that Abraham
immediately felt his anxieties regarding God's purpose for him resolved when
God, in response to his questioning, told him to gather a cow, a goat, ram, and
two birds (Gen. 15.9). But if, like Abraham, we wait and see how God employs such "external symbols" to confirm his promise
to us, we stand to gain substantial (divine) medicine for our doubt. Thus the
sacraments, which both symbolize and secure/enlarge our union with Christ, our
designed by God to resolve our anxieties and bolster our confidence that we
will one day possess in full the fruit of our union with Christ, which is nothing less than eternal fellowship with God himself. "Let us therefore
learn meekly to embrace those helps which God offers for the confirmation of
our faith."
Aaron Clay Denlinger
is professor of church history and historical theology at Reformation Bible
College in Sanford, Florida.