G.K. Beale on the Doctrine of Justification and Future Judgment

A recent article on the Aquila Report alleges that a number of scholars, including John Piper, Thomas Schreiner, and Greg Beale, propagate “an erroneous, heterox interpretation of justification/final judgment by faith and good works.”  The article is  really nothing more than a hit piece without any appeal to the thousands of pages these scholars have devoted to the subject of justification, a rhetorical bombshell bereft of any actual evidence that the doctrine of justification taught by Piper, Schreiner, and Beale is contrary to the witness of the Protestant Reformation.  In a previous post, I looked at the work of John Calvin and tried to briefly show that Calvin, like Piper, taught that obedience is an inseparable concomitant of the faith alone which receives Christ’s righteousness unto justification.  In this article, I’d like to briefly look at what professor Greg Beale has to say about the doctrine of justification in its specific relation to the future judgment.

I write this article, not because Dr. Beale somehow needs my assistance in defending his work.  The many pages he’s written on this subject in his various books and commentaries are defense enough.  Neither do I write this article because the piece on the Aquila Report is substantial enough to merit such a response.  It isn’t.  I write this article because my views on this particular subject were indelibly shaped by Dr. Beale when I was a student at Westminster Theological Seminary and I’d like to provide just a brief summary of what, for me, has proved immensely helpful and edifying.  I write this article in the hopes that the reader might study Dr. Beale’s careful and rigorous exegesis of the biblical texts and be further equipped to defend the biblical doctrine of justification by faith alone.   The following quotations are taken from Chapter 15 of Dr. Beale’s A New Testament Biblical Theology: The Unfolding of the Old Testament in the New.  My summary of his views reflect my reading of this particular work along with my transcriptions of audio recordings taken of his class lectures.

What is justification?  According to Beale’s own definition in a lecture given on the subject, “justification is a declaration of righteousness applied by grace and accomplished through redemption and propitiation in order to demonstrate God’s righteousness.”

In his A New Testament Biblical Theology, Beale defines justification using the words of WCF 11:1:

Those whom God effectually calleth, he also freely justifieth: not by infusing righteousness into them, but by pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting their persons as righteous; not for any thing wrought in them, or done by them, but for Christ’s sake alone; not by imputing faith itself, the act of believing, or any other evangelical obedience to them, as their righteousness; but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ unto them, they receiving and resting on him and his righteousness by faith; which faith they have not of themselves, it is the gift of God.

After quoting the Confession, Beale seeks to provide a biblical-theological defense of the doctrine of justification by faith alone, viewed through the lenses of the “already and not yet” eschatology of the New Testament writers.  The following is a brief summary of what Beale considers to be part and parcel of the New Testament doctrine of justification by faith.

First, Beale considers justification “as the attribution of the representative righteousness of Christ to believers.”  Beale notes that the doctrine of imputation, specifically the imputation of Christ’s active obedience, has been the subject of fierce debate within the contemporary Reformed world for some time.  After listing a number of texts traditionally employed to support the doctrine of positive imputation, Beale comes to the conclusion that the New Testament writers do indeed affirm this doctrine. Commenting on 1 Cor. 1:30, Beale argues that:

Believers’ identification and union with Christ means that ‘in him’ they are considered to have the same (perfect) wisdom, righteousness, holiness, and redemption that Christ had. This does not mean that believers possess these attributes in their personal existence on earth; rather, they are represented by Christ as having become these things for them because of their positional identification of unity with him (i.e. they ‘are in Christ’)…Therefore 1 Cor. 1:30 is best taken to be supportive of the notion that saints are represented by the perfect righteousness of Christ and are considered fully righteous as he is. This is the righteousness fit only for the eternal new creation of the end time.

Second, Beale discusses “the inaugurated eschatological nature of justification,” noting that the “cross of Christ begins the eschatalogical judgment.” Arguing from Romans 3:21-26, Beale argues that the final judgment has been “pushed back into history at the cross of Christ.” The sins which the Jews expected to be punished at the final judgment have been punished in the person of the Messiah.  Thus, God is vindicated as the righteous judge of sin in the judgment of his Son on the cross.  However, there is also a future dimension to the final judgment which will consummate the judgment begun in the cross of Christ: “The eschatological judgment has begun in Jesus, but it will be consummated in the judgment of unbelievers at the very end of the age, directly preceding the establishment of the new creation.”

Third, Beale argues that justification is a forensic or legal term rather than a transformative or renovative one. One of the key implications of this truth is that “those being justified contribute nothing to their justification, though they receive it passively through faith, which too is a gift. The cause of their justification is not from within themselves but rather is God’s ‘free grace.’ Christ’s penal death accounts believers not guilty and not worthy of condemnation, and they are credited with Christ’s righteousness.”

Fourth, Beale discusses the relationship between justification and resurrection, looking first at the nature of Christ’s justification/vindication through his resurrection from the dead:

Jesus’ own resurrection was an end-time event that ‘vindicated’ or ‘justified’ him from the wrong verdict pronounced on him by the world’s courts. The vindication of God’s people against the unjust verdicts of their accusers was to happen at the eschaton, but this has been pushed back to Christ’s resurrection and applied to him.

What does this mean for believers who are united to Christ? “All those who believe in Christ are identified with his resurrection that vindicated him to be completely righteous, and this identification vindicates and declares them to be completely righteous.” This truth is a key emphasis in Beale’s doctrine of justification, an emphasis which is also found in the work of scholars like Richard B. Gaffin, Sinclair Ferguson and Geerhardus Vos.  The justification/vindication of Jesus Christ (1 Tim. 3:15) is the ground of the justification/vindication of those united to him by faith.  This means that all that Christ accomplished for his people (justification, adoption, sanctification) is freely given to them in Spirit-wrought union with his person in their effectual calling.  The justification/vindication of Christ as righteous is pronounced upon his people in their union with him. This vindication will be publicly demonstrated at the final judgment. Specifically, we find three particular aspects of this future, end-time justification/vindication in the NT writers:

1.) Public demonstration of justification/vindication through the final, bodily resurrection;

2.) Justification/vindication of the saints through public announcement before all the world;

3.) Public demonstration to the entire cosmos of believers’ justification/vindication through their good works.

Since the current debate is over the latter concept, I’ll briefly summarize what Beale has to say about the public demonstration to the entire cosmos of believers’ justification/vindication through good works.

Beale states that the justification/vindication of the believer is definitive, once for all, and irrevocable when the sinner receives Christ’s righteousness by faith alone:

[Justification] is definitive in the sense that saints are declared from God’s perspective not guilty because Christ suffered the penalty of their sin. And, just as definitively, they are also declared righteous because Christ achieved representative righteousness for them in his resurrected person and was completely vindicated from injustice (showing that he had been righteous all along), a vindication with which the saints are also identified. Consequently, they are declared to have the same righteousness (by imputation or attribution) that Christ possessed throughout his life and still possesses.

Nevertheless, there is a “not yet” aspect to justification, a sense in which justification/vindication is not completed because “the world does not recognize God’s vindication of his people.”  Therefore, the final resurrection “will vindicate the truth of their faith and confirm that their obedience was a necessary outgrowth of this faith.  That is, although they had been declared righteous in God’s sight when they believed, the world continued to declare them guilty.  Their physical resurrection will be undeniable proof of the validity of their faith, which had already declared them righteous in their past life.”  Beale distinguishes between an “invisible” (already) and “visible” (not yet) aspect of justification in which the forensic declaration of pardon and righteousness received by faith alone in the already, while definite, complete, and irrevocable, is not yet manifested or proved before the unbelieving world.

Beale speaks of good works as “part of this ‘final manifestive justification.’”  Appealing to Rom. 2:13; 14:20, 12; 2 Cor. 5:10 and other texts, Beale shows that the New Testament writers speak of both judgment by works and justification by faith.  How can the two be reconciled?  Beale makes a distinction between a “necessary causal condition” of final justification/vindication which is Christ’s righteousness alone and a necessary “manifestive” condition which consists of Spirit-wrought works in the lives of believers.  Good works are a “necessary” condition of this final justification/vindication in the sense that works provide the evidence that believers were justified by faith alone in Christ alone all along.  Beale uses an analogy which helpfully illustrates the nature of this end-times “manifestive” justification:

A mundane illustration may help to clarify. In the United States, some large discount food stores require people to pay an annual fee to have the privilege of buying food at their store. Once this fee is paid, the member must present a card as evidence of having paid the fee. The card gets the members into the store, but it is not the ultimate reason that the person is granted access. The paid fee is the ultimate reason, the card being the evidence that the fee has been paid. We may refer to the paid fee as the “necessary causal condition” of store entrance and to the evidential card more simply as a “necessary condition.”  The card is the external manifestation or proof that the price has been paid, so that both the money paid and the card issued are necessary for admittance, but they do not have the same conditional force for gaining entrance. We may call the paid fee a “first order” or “ultimate” condition and the card a “second order” condition. Likewise, Christ’s justification penal death is the price paid ‘once for all’ (Heb. 9:12; cf. 9:26-28) and the good works done within the context of Christian faith become the inevitable evidence of such faith at the final judicial evaluation.

Beale appeals to a distinction made by Jonathan Edwards between Christ’s work as constituting the “causal” ground of justification and believers’ works as providing the “manifestive” evidence of the once for all reality of the former.  This “manifestive evidence” is a key part of the judicial process and will serve to vindicate the faith of believers on the day of judgment before an unbelieving world.  This “manifestive” justification overturns the false judgment of the world and vindicates God’s people as righteous by faith alone in Christ.

Commenting on 2 Cor. 4:6-5:10, Beale argues that the future justification/vindication of believers is reflective of the justification/vindication that has already been accomplished in the past.  There aren’t “two justifications” but one justification with two dimensions: the already and the not yet.  The “not yet” justification serves to infallibly confirm the reality of the “already.”  Using the words of Richard B. Gaffin, Beale writes that “the last judgment of believers, which is according to works, ‘is reflective of and further attesting their justification that has been openly manifested in their bodily resurrection.’” Furthermore, “as they appear before the judgment seat in their resurrected body, they are also now in the perfect image of the last Adam and in union with him, which further includes a testimony to their righteous, obedient character. Such righteous obedience begins during the interadvent age, which is actually a part of what it means to begin to be in Christ’s image during that age.”

Hence, Beale argues that 2 Cor. 5:10 refers not to a future reward according to works but to a “manifestive justification or vindication” through judgment. The same idea is found in 1 Cor. 3:13: “Each man’s work will become manifest [phaneros]; for the day will show it because it is to be revealed with fire, and the fire itself will test the quality of each man’s work.” According to Beale, “this refers to some who are saved and others who will be judged at the eschaton.”

In the concluding section of his discussion of the relationship between justification, resurrection, and good works, Beale surveys various interpretations of how justification relates to a final judgment by works.

The first view states that “justification by faith and justification (or judgment) of the believer by works is hypothetical, especially in a text such as Rom. 2:13. That is, there are two ways to be justified, by faith or by works, the latter of which can be accomplished only by being perfect, and therefore sinful humanity can receive justification only by faith.” This is the view taken by scholars such as Frank Thielman.

The second view is that “justification or judgment by works must be appreciated through understanding Paul’s rhetorical purposes, which differ depending on the circumstances and audiences to which he is responding.”

The third view, commonly espoused in the contemporary Reformed world, is that “judgment according to works for saints occurs as a distribution of differing rewards for differing degrees of faithful service at the very end of time and, therefore, subsequent to their having been justified by faith.” This is the view taken by New Testament scholars such as George Eldon Ladd in his A Theology of the New Testament.

The fourth view is that “final justification and acquittal is based only on works.”  This view is commonly associated with figures such as N.T. Wright who frequently argues for a final justification “based on the whole life lived.”

The fifth view which is the view defended by Beale is that “justification and judgment are grounded in the believers’ union with Christ, the former coming by faith, the latter being an evaluation of works that necessrily arise from the truth faith-union with Christ and by means of the Spirit’s empowerment.”  Good works are not the ground or the cause of justification either in the already or the not yet, but they are the necessary evidence of the faith which receives it:

Justification and final judgment have their foundation in the believers’ union with Christ. Justification occurs by faith alone, and judgment happens on the basis of an examination of works, which are the fruit of the genuine faith-union with Christ and are empowered by the Spirit.

Beale concludes with a rigorous exegesis of various texts which speak of “judgment at the eschaton according to works for people already justified by faith alone” (emphasis mine).

What can we learn from Dr. Beale’s treatment of the doctrine of justification?  First, we learn that Beale faithfully reflects the teaching of the Reformed tradition in his repeated claim that Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ alone is the “necessary-causal ground” of our justification and that the instrument whereby we receive Christ and his righteousness is faith alone, both in the “already” and in the “not yet.”  As Beale argues in a lecture on the doctrine of justification (copied verbatim from an audio recording): “There is no other basis for final acquittal but Christ’s righteousness received by faith alone.”  This reflects the teaching of the Westminster Larger Catechism Q & A 71 that justification is an act of God’s free grace “not for anything wrought in them, or done by them, but only for the perfect obedience and full satisfaction of Christ, by God imputed to them, and received by faith alone.”

Second, we learn from Beale’s treatment that Scripture distinguishes between two aspects or dimensions of justification and not two distinct or different justifications. This is an important point to keep in mind in the present debate over the issue.  According to Beale there isn’t an “initial” justification by faith and a “final” justification grounded in good works. Rather, when the Father, by the holy Spirit, effectually calls sinners unto himself and grants them the gift of justifying faith in union with Christ, they are as justified in Christ as they will ever be.  The obedience of believers, while not serving as the ground of future vindication, nevertheless is necessary as the “manifestation” or “proof” of the definitive, irrevocable, and once for all justification received by faith alone in the past.

Which leads to the last point and that is that the recent article posted on the Aquila Report which accuses Dr. Beale and others of propogating “an erroneous, heterox interpretation of justification/final judgment by faith and good works” fails to interact with what these men and the Reformed tradition actually have to say about this issue.   The idea of a future manifestive judgment according to works has a rich history within the Reformed tradition.  One particular example of a view nearly identical to that of Dr. Beale’s is the view taken by Westminster Divine Thomas Manton.  Manton’s defense of a double justification is nicely summarized in chapter 49 of Joel Beeke and Mark Jones’ A Puritan Theology.  Manton argues that believers are under a double law- the law of nature and of grace.  The covenant of works must be perfectly and perpetually fulfilled, a reality that has been accomplished by Christ.  His righteousness is the exclusive ground of justification and is received by faith alone.  The second covenant- the covenant of grace- demands faith and repentance and Christ will examine these graces at the final judgment in order to vindicate their genuine character.  As Jones writes:  “Thus two accusations may be brought against a man at the final judgment: first, that he has breached the covenant of works by his sinning, or that he was a spurious professor of Christ.  Manton argues that to escape the first accusation we must be justified by faith alone (Rom. 3:24); to escape the second we must be justified by works.”  Manton himself puts it like this:

To this double judgment there answereth a double justification:  of a sinner, by virtue of the satisfaction of Christ, apprehended by faith, without the works of the law; of a believer, or one in the state of grace, so justified by works; for here it is not inquired whether he have satisfied the law, that he may have life by it, but whether, professing himself to be a Christian, he be a true believer- and that must be tried by his works; for as God in the covenant of grace giveth us two benefits, remission of sins and sanctification by the Spirit, so he requireth two duties from us- a thankful acceptance of his grace by faith, and also new obedience as the fruit of love.

Manton’s position is identical to that of Beale’s and both share the same interpretation of 2 Cor. 5:10- that Paul has in view a justification/vindication according to works which examines the faith of the believer and vindicates its authenticity.  Beale’s “erroneous and heterox” understanding of the final judgment turns out to be the same view as one of the most significant 17th century Puritan theologians who also served as clerk to the Westminster Assembly.  As we read Manton and others on this issue (as Jones argues, Manton was not the only Reformed theologian to argue for a double justification) it becomes evident that recent attacks upon the views of men like Beale, Piper, and Schreiner display an astonishing lack of familiarity with the Reformed tradition they’re purportedly defending.  It turns out that the “Reformed” theology these critics are seeking to preserve- one which condemns any notion of a future judgment for believers according to works- isn’t very Reformed at all.

Rhetorical hit pieces and drive by theological treatises against godly Christian men may be easy to write. But the ignorance and absence of Christian love manifested in such hit pieces do nothing to advance an honest, patient and clearheaded exchange of ideas by brothers in Christ united to the same Savior and members of the same body.  Remaining faithful to Scripture and remembering the Protestant Reformation means actually reading and understanding and taking the time to familiarize ourselves with the tradition we’re seeking to defend and the views of those we’re critiquing.

Are the “Calvinist” Critics of Piper Really Calvinists At All?

When I was a student at Westminster Seminary, I spent a number of months studying the Norman Shepherd controversy which racked that institution decades ago, listening to recordings, talking to some of the men involved, weighing the arguments for and against Shepherd. As I studied this issue, one particular concern emerged, a concern that reemerged within the past few weeks as I read the critiques and condemnations of a man who has fought, especially in recent years, to uphold and defend the Reformed doctrine of justification against those whose views endanger it.  And while I came down on the side of Shepherd’s critics, it seemed that a small number of them ended up defending a view of justification that was decidedly at odds with Calvin’s.

That’s the concern:  that many of the contemporary arguments used to defend a Reformed doctrine of justification don’t seem to be very Reformed at all. While I was working through the Shepherd debacle at Westminster, I began looking at what Calvin has to say about the relationship between faith and works, justification and sanctification, obedience and eternal reward. What I found surprised me and my concerns were only confirmed.

Unlike many “Reformed” theologians today who view conditional or instrumental language with respect to good works as unorthodox or legalistic or outside the bounds of Reformed orthodoxy, Calvin unashamedly uses such language. While I appreciate R. Scott Clark and Rachel Green Miller’s zeal to preserve the Reformed tradition, and while I’ve personally benefited from their writings throughout the years, I can’t help but wonder, as I read their critiques of Piper: What kind of “Reformed tradition” are they trying to defend? In their zeal to defend Calvinism, it seems to me that Clark and Green-Miller have actually departed from a Calvinist view of the subject rather than providing a sound defense of that view. As I hope to show, I just don’t think there is anything Piper has argued on this particular subject that Calvin hasn’t also argued, often using more explicit language. Here are just a few brief arguments Calvin makes in his discussion of these issues, arguments which I think will serve as a corrective to some of the uninformed and rhetorically bombastic comments being made by those who should know better. All quotations are from Calvin’s Institutes and those references without a citation are from the previously cited section.

First, Calvin notes that actual holiness of life cannot be separated from the free imputation of righteousness. We cannot enjoy one benefit without enjoying the other. We cannot be justified without also being sanctified: “When this topic is rightly understood it will better appear how man is justified by faith alone, and simple pardon; nevertheless actual holiness of life, so to speak, is not separated from free imputation of righteousness” (3.3.1).

Second, the reason for the indissoluble bond between the free imputation of righteousness and actual holiness of life lies in the nature of our union with Christ. Those united to Jesus Christ receive a double grace: justification and sanctification. Arguing against Osiander’s doctrine of essential righteousness as the ground of justification, Calvin argues that we are united to Christ in a solidaric bond by the power of the holy Spirit and therefore receive both the imputation and infusion of his righteousness (3.11.6). Jesus Christ cannot be torn in two, thus imputed righteousness and sanctification while distinct (contra Osiander), are nevertheless inseparable and simultaneously bestowed benefits enjoyed in mystical union with Him: “As Christ cannot be torn into parts, so these two which we perceive in him together and conjointly are inseparable- namely, righteousness and sanctification…Whomever, therefore, God receives into grace, on them he at the same time bestows the Spirit of adoption, by whose power he remakes them to his own image” (3.11.6, emphasis mine).

Third, repentance is not merely the fruit of forgiveness but is also, according to Calvin, the prior condition of forgiveness (3.3.20). Notice that Calvin distinguishes between repentance as a condition of pardon and repentance as the basis of pardon: “We must note that this condition is not so laid down as if our repentance were the basis of our deserving pardon, but rather, because the Lord has determined to have pity on men to the end that they may repent, he indicates in what direction men should proceed if they wish to obtain grace” (3.3.20). The true believer is displeased with his sin, hastens to God, and yearns for him in order that he, “having been engrafted into the life and death of Christ, might give attention to continual repentance. Those who hate sin cannot do otherwise than pursue righteousness.”

Fourth, Calvin speaks of holiness as the necessary bond of union with God (3.6.2). Holiness is not optional for the true believer and God will not dwell with those who are unclean: “From what foundation may righteousness better arise than from the Scriptural warning that we must be made holy because our God is holy?”

This does not mean that we, by our holiness, merit or earn the gift of union: “When we hear mention of our union with God, let us remember that holiness must be its bond; not because we come into communion with him by virtue of our holiness! Rather, we ought first to cleave unto him so that, infused with his holiness, may may follow whither he calls.” Those whose lives are not marked by holiness cannot enjoy such fellowship:

“Since it is especially characteristic of his glory that he have no fellowship with wickedness and uncleanness, Scripture accordingly teaches that this is the goal of our calling which we must ever look if we would answer God when he calls [Is. 35:8, etc].” God will not dwell with those who profane him with impurity. In order to dwell with the Lord and be reckoned as the people of God, we must be holy: “At the same time Scripture admonishes us that to be reckoned among the people of the Lord we must dwell in the holy city of Jerusalem [cf. Ps. 116:19; 122:2-9]. As he has consecrated this city to himself, it is unlawful to profane it with the impurity of its inhabitants…For it is highly unfitting that the sanctuary in which he dwells should like a stable be crammed with filth” (3.6.3).

Fifth, Calvin speaks of conformity to Christ as the condition of our adoption. While we cannot, by our conformity to Christ, merit our sonship, we cannot be adopted into God’s family without conforming to the image of Christ since we are adopted for precisely this purpose:

“[Scripture] not only enjoins us to refer our life to God, its author, to whom it is bound; but after it has taught that we have degenerated from the true origin and condition of our creation, it also adds that Christ, through whom we return into favor with God, has been set before us as an example, whose pattern we ought to express in our life. What more effective thing can you require than this one thing? Nay, what can you require beyond this one thing. For we have been adopted as sons by the Lord with this one condition: that our life express Christ, the bond of our adoption. Accordingly, unless we give and devote ourselves to righteousness, we not only revolt from our Creator with wicked perfidy but we also abjure our Savior himself” (3.6.3, emphasis mine).

Sixth, in light of the necessity of sanctification in the life of the believer, a life marked by the fruits of lifelong mortification and vivification, Calvin speaks of various texts which “call eternal life the reward of works” (3.18.1). One such text is Rom. 2:6 which does not undermine the reality that “[God] receives his own into life by his mercy alone.” When such important qualifications are made, however, the clear teaching of the text is that “He [God] leads them into possession of it [eternal life] through the race of good works in order to fulfill his own work in them according to the order that he has laid down.”

According to Calvin, Paul teaches that believers are “crowned according to their own works, by which they are doubtless prepared to receive the crown of immortality.” Good works are not in any way “opposed to grace.” Once believers are “by knowledge of the gospel and illumination of the holy Spirit, called into the fellowship of Christ, eternal life begins in them. Now that God has begun a good work in them, it must also be made perfect until the Day of the Lord Jesus (Phil. 1:6). It is, however, made perfect when, resembling their Heavenly Father in righteousness and holiness, they prove themselves sons true to their nature.”

Calvin is clear that we ought never to think of eternal reward as “a matter of merit.” Nevertheless, Scripture teaches us that this eternal reward is, in truth, “a compensation for their [believers’] miseries, tribulations, slanders, etc” (3.18.4). Consequently, Calvin argues, “nothing prevents us, with Scriptural precedent (cf. 2 Cor. 6:13; Heb. 10:35; 11:26], from calling eternal life a ‘recompense’ because in it the Lord receives his own people from toil into repose, from affliction into a prosperous and desirable state, from sorrow into joy, from poverty into affluence, from disgrace into glory.” Calvin concludes, “It will be nothing amiss if we regard holiness of life to be the way, not indeed that gives access to the glory of the heavenly kingdom, but by which those chosen by their God are led to its disclosure. For it is God’s good pleasure to glorify those whom he has sanctified” (3.18.4).

Observe in these quotes that Calvin refers to eternal life as the “reward of works”; that we possess eternal life “through the race of good works”; that believers will be “crowned according their own works”; that good works are the necessary means through which believers are led to their eternal reward; and that such works prepare them “to receive the crown of immortality.” Elsewhere Calvin argues that “the Lord does not trick or mock us when he says that he will reward works with what he had given free before works” (3.18.3) and that “the fruit of the promises is duly assigned to works” (3.18.3). Together with the aforementioned arguments that there can be no imputation of righteousness without actual holiness of life; that justification and sanctification are inseparable and simultaneously bestowed benefits given in union with Christ; that repentance is a condition of forgiveness; and that conformity to Christ is the condition of our adoption, I am baffled by those who argue against such language as heterox or outside the bounds of Reformed orthodoxy. What kind of Calvinism are they trying to defend? By contemporary standards, is Calvin himself a Calvinist or is he, like Piper, arguing “contrary to Scripture, to the Reformation, and to the Reformed confessions and catechisms” as Rachel Green Miller writes in her article?

The importance of Calvin’s arguments for the present debate over good works and their relationship to repentance, obedience, and the final judgment cannot be overestimated. Judged in light of Calvin’s words and the very same kind instrumental and conditional language he uses, I don’t find in Piper anything that Calvin himself didn’t argue, often using even more explicitly instrumental and conditional language. I can’t help but conclude that Calvin’s treatment of the subject effectively puts the nail in the coffin of all attempts to condemn the language of instrumentality, conditionality, and necessity as unorthodox aberrations outside the bounds of confessional Calvinism.

It seems to me that many modern “Reformed” treatments of justification have been influenced more by the noxious winds of evangelical antinomianism, by the kind of 19th and 20th century revivalism that has so indelibly shaped contemporary theological discourse, than by the theology of Calvin himself. Calvin and the “Calvinists” which followed him were zealously opposed to any theology of works righteousness which attributed to good works a meritorious character. And yet, as those who had been delivered from Roman legalism, they did not swing to the opposite extreme like many today and deny the necessity of good works for final salvation, or avoid speaking of them in terms of instrument or condition. The question I’m forced to ask as I read Calvin and his 17th century followers on this issue is: “Are Piper’s ‘Calvinist’ critics really Calvinists at all?” Because it seems to me that on this issue, their “Calvinism” isn’t the Calvinism of Calvin himself.