Category: Edward W. H. Vick

  • Justification by Grace Through Faith

    Justification by Grace Through Faith

    Edward Vick in his book Justification by Grace Through Faith insists that this formulation is critical:

    The stress must be laid upon the priority of Godโ€™s grace. Justification, acceptance of man by God, has its basis in the grace of God and hence grace must be the primary term all the time. The doctrine of justification by faith is not primarily concerned with faith, but with grace. The source and thus the resting point of justification is outside of ourselves. God in Jesus Christ is the source of faith and he is gracious quite apart from my attitude toward him. Thus the expression โ€˜by faithโ€™ might be misleading. For faith has its source in grace. It derives from God. So we will go badly wrong if we should say โ€˜by my faithโ€™ and not โ€˜by Godโ€™s graceโ€™. Faith by its very nature directs us away from ourselves outward toward God the source of all good, and the fountain of all forgiveness. We would do better to use the preposition โ€˜throughโ€™ rather than โ€˜byโ€™ in describing the experience of acceptance with God. We would then talk of justification through faith. For indeed the clause is an abbreviation of the longer and clearer one: Justification by Grace through faith. Faith is the instrument through which grace flows to man, the channel cut by the flow of that grace, so to speak. Thus faith is directed away from itself towards its source in God. So the preposition of instrumentality, in Greek dia, German durch, and English through is appropriately used to qualify โ€˜faithโ€™. Not โ€˜by faithโ€™ but โ€˜through faithโ€™ is the correct way to speak. But if we understand that this is what the expression โ€˜by faithโ€™ means then its familiarity need not mislead us.

    If all is of God, we must insist upon the fact that faith is the instrumental reality. We must insist upon it so strongly that we modify the slogan, โ€˜justification by faithโ€™, so as to correct a misinterpretation which would shift the centre of Christianity away from its source in Jesus Christ.

    Edward W. H. Vick, Justification by Grace Through Faith, 90-91
  • Book Extract: The Antithesis of the Law

    Book Extract: The Antithesis of the Law

    This post is an extract from the forthcoming book Justification by Faith by Dr. Edward W. H. Vick, which should be available late spring to early summer. It is posted as part of our Discussion on the Law.

    Thus if there is a way to be found to God it will be the antithesis of law. In Jesus Christ that way has been found, โ€˜But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from law. Romans. 3:21. What is meant by law here is a way of approach to God via the performance of the deeds of law, without the presence of faith. This usage of the term โ€˜lawโ€™ has been defined as โ€˜divine law viewed as a purely legalistic system made up of statutes of the basis of obedience or disobedience to which it justifies or condemns.[i] There was no guarantee of freedom from sin under this way. In fact the law seemed to gain in authority every time it was broken. Manโ€™s impotence in face of it, his indwelling sin dominating him, gave to the law the power of a tyrant. As long as sin is present, the power of the law is present and law condemns. When sin is removed the sting is drawn from the law. And when the sin is removed, the law ceases to be a way of life, Romans 8:3,4.

    โ€˜For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh: that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spiritโ€™

    That new way of life is described by the expression โ€˜under graceโ€™. So Paul asserts, โ€˜Ye are not under law but under grace.โ€™ Romans 6:14. And as usual he meant what he said. The statement is made, interestingly enough, in connection with another, โ€˜for sin shall not have dominion over youโ€™, which precedes. This connection the legalist always misses. To be free from the dominion of sin you must repudiate law. If it is freedom from sin that we quest, โ€˜under lawโ€™ must be rejected for โ€˜under graceโ€™. The legalist says that the only way there is freedom from the dominion of sin is by putting myself โ€˜under lawโ€™. The antithesis could not have been more sharply drawn as it has been in this verse. We may take our choice. โ€˜Under graceโ€™, the way of law is over and done with once and for all. Through grace we see that adherence to law any law, divinely given or humanly framed, majestic or trite, is a blind alley if peace with God and sanctification of life is sought. The rejection of law at this essential point is our only shield against antinomianism, as it is our only shield against legalism. For the despair that ensues from the attempt to keep law may easily lead to an accommodation of its requirements and to a casuistry that is more concerned about avoiding the injunction than in following it.

    It is in the context of an experienced grace, and a continuing faith, which is to say, in the context of relationship with God that the โ€˜worksโ€™ of the Christian are done. Since they are spontaneous they do not occupy the foreground of attention. For one who really has faith, the obedience which the discipleship requires at this point is forthcoming. It is the fruit and the evidence of the discipleยญship. And the discipleship is often expressed in unpredictable ways, as new demands are made upon oneโ€™s obedience. It is the unpredictability of the demand that the legalist cannot stand. He must know all and everything now. The trust that is absolute requires no assurances for the future, except that which is given by the present relationship.

    Sanctification thus has its eschatological aspect. The believer must wage the warfare against sin, the flesh and the devil. He knows both that the victory has already been won, as well as he knows that the victory is not yet. In Christ sin has been judged, and thus vanquished. At the parousia it will be finally obliterated. While living between the times, the believer enters into the victory of the former, and anticipates the victory of the latter. Christ has conquered, and will conquer. The believer shares in one victory and anticipates the other. Between the cross and the eschaton the believer demonstrates the reality of that conquest.

    The way of faith is a way of freedom. To abandon faith for law is to abandon freedom for bondage. One cannot add law to Gospel and hope that benefit will ensue. A decided choice between the two must be made. That is the point of Paulโ€™s allegory of Sarah and Hagar, with the command he draws from it: โ€˜Cast out the slave and her son; for the son of the slave shall not inherit with the son of the free woman,โ€™ Galatians 4:30.


    [i] Burton. Commentary on Galatians, p. 457.

  • Inspiration of Scripture: Meaning What?

    Inspiration of Scripture: Meaning What?

    by Edward W. H. Vick

    l. Theory and Fact

    The incentive for constructing theories of inspiration is to provide a basis for asserting the authority of the Bible. The Bible, so the argument goes, has authority because it is inspired, and it is inspired in the way the theory of inspiration accounts for it. Since we know how the scriptural books came into being and how they became part of the canon, we simply have to reject any theories which do not take this process into account, or which do not take it sufficiently into account.1 The question how in fact a scriptural writing was produced is decisive: โ€˜the real question is whether in fact such a writing was ever produced to form part of the Bible as we know it today. It is by this criterion, and not by its inner logic or consistency, that the relevance of the scholastic theology of inspiration must be judged.โ€™2

    The question how in fact a scriptural writing was produced is decisive. It is the criterion by which we must judge not only a scholastic theology of inspiration but any theology of inspiration. What is at issue is the relevance of any theology of inspiration. In view of what we now know concerning how the book came to its final form, we ask how a theory of inspiration can be helpful and what it is that it explains. We must keep the demands of what we know about the actual production of the literature always before our minds. We go seriously wrong if we do not constantly keep in mind what happened in the long story of the composition, compilation and acceptance of the Bible.

    A theory of inspiration may make claims that are easily shown to be false by carefully examining the facts. It will either ignore or explain away the facts. Any satisfactory doctrine of inspiration will take account of these data, and be compatible with them. It will take notice of the history of the Bible, and its great complexity. It will not take as an a priori principle that the Bible is inspired, and then proceed to build on it, saying something like, โ€˜The Bible is inspired, therefore . . . .โ€™ and then proceed to fill in the claim, e.g. there were certain ways in which it could not have been written. The last time I confronted the argument it went: โ€˜The Bible was inspired, therefore its writers could not have borrowed or copied from other sources in any shape or form.โ€™
    Rather one first asks: What, according to the evidence which is available, are the stages and the processes which took place before the end-product resulted? If you ask this historical question, you will have to keep an open mind. It is not fitting, nor is it honest (even if one is sincere) to say, โ€˜Scripture is inspired: therefore such-and-such did not happen.โ€™ We must seriously take account of the historical data. We may not overlook any significant facts in building a doctrine of Scripture.

    2. Some Well-established Facts about Scripture

    Here, then, is a short list of some well-established facts about the Scriptures. They represent the dedicated efforts of competent and devoted scholars over several centuries:

    1. There is an enormous range of styles in the Scriptures. Some is literature of the very highest rank. Other is ungrammatical.
    2. There are literary relationships between some of the scriptural writings. That means that the similarities are so close that they come from common literary, i.e. written, sources. Simply, the writer copied from other people.
    3. Oral traditions lie behind our written documents.
    4. The traditions were reworked, often several times, before the product resulted as we now have it. The process of redaction was complex.
    5. It was a common practice for ancient authors to use pseudonyms. They hoped to give distinction to their work by connecting it with well-known figures.
    6. It is at times impossible to harmonize some biblical narratives with others.
    7. Each piece of writing has come from a quite particular historical setting. In the majority of cases we can reconstruct that particular setting and relate the writing to the setting.
    8. Often, e.g. in Genesis, Kings, Deuteronomy, several oral traditions were set side by side.

    3. How the Books were Put Together

    The following is a very brief and simplified summary of the series of events that went into the making of a book.

    โ€˜Literary studies lead to the conclusion that the process of composition of a typical Old Testament book was as follows: a. groups of unknown people composed oral form to help them with their work, their worship, their teaching; b. the oral forms were passed on through the generations, undergoing small changes from time to time; c. local men of letters wrote down the oral forms with which they were familiar; d. in some period of great literary activity, an editor collected these various literary products and combined them into one large work; e. the large work might be combined with others to make up a complete roll.โ€™3

    Any doctrine of inspiration must reckon with these facts, take into account this complex process by which the books came into being and the manner in which they came to have a special recognition in the church.

    4. Norms for a Doctrine of Scripture

    Even if we do not wish to enter into discussion of a particular viewpoint because we do not consider it an issue, it is sometimes worthยญwhile to say why it is acceptable or unacceptable. โ€˜Inerrancyโ€™ is the term used to refer to the view which holds that the Bible is without error, that it must be interpreted in such a way that one may claim that it contains no kind of error. โ€˜Verbal inspirationโ€™ is the theory which says that the words of the writing have their origin in the divine initiative. โ€˜Dictationโ€™ is the theory that God โ€˜spokeโ€™ the actual words of the biblical writer, who duly set them down. Hence, the words of Scripture are the words of God. Dictation theory is not always, but very often, called upon as support for a doctrine of scriptural inerrancy.
    We shall now simply list reasons why a verbal, i.e. dictation, theory of inspiration is in error.

    1. The โ€˜writersโ€™ do not claim to be inspired in this way.
    2. Only the originals would be so inspired. We donโ€™t have them. Translations are of secondary value.
    3. It says nothing about the function of the books. Suppose they had been inspired in this way and left in a box and not yet discovered?
    4. Dictation theory is a caricature of the actual process of composition and transmission, which is quite varied indeed. It was โ€˜in many and varied waysโ€™ that โ€˜God spokeโ€™ [Hebrews 1:1]. Luke was not dictated to. Mark and other sources were copied by other scriptural writers.
    5. It makes the writers into puppets. The theory of accommodaยญtion is an obvious enough rationalization.
    6. Evidence from the writings themselves contradicts a verbal inspiration theory.
    7. It misconceives the idea of authority.
    8. Even if it were true it would not establish the authority of Scripture. It only tells us how the words got on to the page.
    9. The writings are not without error.
    10. It fails to consider the historical evidence and in doing so distorts basic definitions, for example, โ€˜writer,โ€™ โ€˜author.โ€™
    11. It does not do justice to the diversity of the biblical materials.

    The question which raises a worthwhile issue is this: Can a duly modified theory of inspiration take account of the facts, some of which we have just mentioned? That is to say, Can a concept of โ€˜inspirationโ€™ serve as a theological idea which can provide an adequate explanation of those convictions the Christian wishes to express about the Bible? Rejecting a theory of verbal inspiration, where dictation is the means, can we defend a modified theory of inspiration and account for the Christian attitude to and use of the Bible?

    We can certainly set out check points for any such doctrine. By referring to the objections made above to a dictation theory of inspiration, we can derive some norms for an adequate doctrine of Scripture. Any adequate doctrine of the Bible must give a satisfactory account of the following:

    1. What the โ€˜writersโ€™ themselves claim or do not claim.
    2. The history of the original text, of its transmission and translation.
    3. How the books actually function in the Christian community. How the church uses the writings.
    4. The complex and various ways in which the writings came to be, and in particular,
    5. The creative individuality and contextuality, i.e. the humanity, of the writers.
    6. Evidence from the writings concerning the origin of parยญticular oracles, ideas and pronouncements.
    7. That the authority of the Bible is religious and relational.
    8. That the words of Scripture come to have such authority. This involves an extended process of recognition or canonization.
    9. That the writings are not inerrant.
    10. The history of the composition and compilation of the books.
    11. The great diversity of the biblical materials: including style, culture, religious and ethical views, form, and aim.

    ยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญยญ_____________________________________________________

    1Cf. Leo XIII (Nov. 18th. 1893).

    2Bruce Vawter, Biblical Inspiration. London: Hutchinson, 1972 3.1, p. 75.

    3David Stacey, Interpreting the Bible, London, Sheldon Press, 1976. pp. 44-45.

Energion Direct
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.