Home / Doctrine / Doctrine of Covenant Succession
THE PRESBYTERIAN DOCTRINES OF COVENANT
CHILDREN, COVENANT NURTURE AND COVENANT SUCCESSION
One of the features of Presbyterian thought and life
which ought most dramatically to distinguish it from the
prevailing evangelicalism is its view of the church's
children. That, in fact, even evangelical Presbyterianism
is not clearly differentiated in this way is, in my
judgment, one of the saddest and most dangerous
consequences of the debasement of our theology in both
pulpit and pew. I do not hesitate to say that in respect
to the doctrine of covenant succession, that set of
truths connected with the purpose of God that his saving
grace run in the lines of generations, there has been
such a debasement and that it has resulted in
Presbyterian people being robbed of one of the most
precious parts of their inheritance.
That this doctrine in its various parts is either
imperfectly understood or misunderstood appears in many
ways. I have noticed as a pastor, in countless interviews
for church membership, the assumption on the part of many
who have grown up in Presbyterian churches that it is
nevertheless expected that they should know when and how
they were converted. Very often, upon further reflection,
these same people are quite willing to admit that what
they had counted as their conversion may not, in fact,
have been the beginning of their new life in Christ, and
that they may well have been Christians long before. I
have myself listened to more than a few Presbyterian
sermons devoted to one aspect or another of this truth
only to be dismayed by how far removed such instruction
regularly is from the doctrine of our church and our
theological tradition. It is now quite common, for
example, to hear ministers rise to the defense of parents
whose children have betrayed the gospel as if they have
quite forgotten the emphatic connection the Bible makes
between the faithfulness of parental nurture and the
eventual spiritual convictions of children.[
John R. de Witt, in his
excellent exposition of the parable of the prodigal son,
while acknowledging the tremendous responsibility laid
upon parents for the spiritual nurture of their children
and the blameworthiness of parents who neglect that
nurture, nevertheless argues: 'But it is by no means
possible to argue back from a life wrecked by sin to
parental blame, and to say that because a son or daughter
comes to lead a life of wickedness, therefore the parents
must certainly have been at fault. Who of us is
sufficient for these things? It is, after all, only the
grace of God that brings any to Christ and spares any a
life of folly and ruin. Some godly and faithful parents
have had wretched children, for the wreckage of whose
lives they were not responsible. That the instance of the
prodigal son also makes clear.' Amazing Love,
Edinburgh, 1981, pp. 2324. It is noteworthy that
this conclusion is almost precisely that of my friend
Bruce Ray who writes from a Reformed Baptist persuasion.
Withhold not Correction, Phillipsburg, 1978, p.
67. This is still more interesting in view of de Witt's
splendid and thorough refutation of the Reformed Baptist
perspective. 'Children and the Covenant of Grace,'
Westminster Theological Journal, vol. XXXVII
(Winter, 1975) pp. 239255. Surely it strains the
principles governing the interpretation of parables to
draw such a conclusion from the backsliding of the
prodigal son. Moreover, it would seem rather obvious that
the eventual repentance of the son and reconciliation
with his father rather argues for the opposite
conclusion. ] And no wonder! For all
the books available defending paedobaptism, there is not
presently in print, to my knowledge, a single work of
substance and worth devoted to the doctrine of covenant
succession, providing a Biblical exposition of the
doctrine in its various parts, clearing objections, and
applying the whole to the practicalities of
childrearing in the Christian home. Such a work is
most definitely a desideratum. It would be hard to
imagine that the church would rightly understand this
part of the Scripture's teaching, alien as it is to the
individualism and voluntarism of American evangelical
culture, when it is so little considered in the
literature available to the typical pastor or church
member. Though a graduate of a Presbyterian seminary, I
do not recall any serious consideration of this aspect
either of theology or pastoral ministry, even though it
very obviously bears directly and profoundly on the
health and the growth of any church. [
I am happy to report that
the situation is now otherwise at my alma mater, Covenant
Theological Seminary. Prof. David Jones' syllabus for the
course in ecclesiology contains an
historicaltheological and exegetical consideration
of the place of covenant children in the economy of
grace.] My informal investigations
suggest that my experience would be typical of today's
Presbyterian seminary graduate. I recently attended a
church growth seminar taught by a Presbyterian pastor.
Listed as topics for possible consideration were more
than a dozen subjects bearing on ways and means to
enlarge the church. Conspicuous by its absence was any
mention of anything having to do with the birth and
subsequent nurture of the church's children, even though
it is easy to prove that since the church's beginning in
Eden and still today the primary instrument of her growth
has been that of covenant succession. We must, alas,
offer as final evidence of the loss of this doctrine in
Presbyterian circles the substantial number of the
church's children that are being lost to the world in our
day.
In these, and other ways, it appears that the thought
and practice of evangelical Presbyterian churches is in
the present day often untrue to their theological
tradition. It also appears that this betrayal has
occurred by default, unwittingly. Our doctrine has not
been well taught in seminaries, in pulpits, or in books,
whether written for ministers or laymen. Consequently,
many ministers and congregations have only a vague notion
of the theological substructure of the practice of
paedobaptism, of the underlying method by which God's
grace is appointed to run in the lines of generations.
Too often today we find Presbyterians quite capable of
fighting the good fight on behalf of infant baptism who
then think of their children and raise them according to
what are indubitably baptistic principles.
This is a phenomenon which demands explanation. How is
it that this aspect of Reformed thought should be so
poorly understood in our day? Why should this doctrine
and not others have been left behind as the Reformed
Faith made its way into the modern era?
THE DOCTRINE OF COVENANT SUCCESSION IN REFORMED
THEOLOGY
A major effort to offer just such an explanation was
made by Lewis Bevens Schenck in a dissertation for Yale
University, published in 1940 by the Yale University
Press as The Presbyterian Doctrine of Children in the
Covenant: An Historical Study of the Significance of
Infant Baptism in the Presbyterian Church in America.
It is a most valuable book, covering important ground not
covered elsewhere. It is only further evidence of the
problem that Schenck's book has been for so long out of
print and is so little known by Presbyterian pastors. In
my judgment, it is far more valuable and bears more
directly on the necessities of the ministry than most
books being read by them today.
Schenck's book, as the title indicates, is an
historical study. It begins with an account of the
doctrine of the status of children in the covenant as
that doctrine was given its definitive construction as an
aspect of Calvin's revolutionary ecclesiology. Building
on his conviction that the covenant which God established
between himself and Abraham contained nothing less than
the promise of eternal life and that it was a spiritual
reality and communion of life between God and man, [
Institutes of the Christian Religion, IV, xvi, 3;
Schenck, pp. 69. ] Calvin proceeded to draw out the
implications of the fact that Abraham's descendants were
likewise participants in this covenant.
'...it will be evident that baptism is properly
administered to infants
as something owed to them. For in early times the Lord
did not
deign to have them circumcised without making them
participants
in all those things which were then signified by
circumcision.
[Institutes, IV, xvi, 5.]
Therefore, the promise of covenant relationship
meaning what it does, the salvation of such infants is
included in the promise: 'I will be a God to you and to
your descendants after you' (Gen 17:7). Such children 'do
not become the sons of God through baptism; but because,
they are heirs of adoption, in virtue of the promise,
therefore, the Church admits them to baptism.[Articuli
A Facultate Sacrae Theologiae Parisiensi Determinati
Super Materiis Fidei Nostrae Hodie Controversis Cum
Antidoto (1544), Corpus Reformatorum, vol. 35,
7, cited by Schenck, p. 9.] The covenant belongs to the
children, since the promise of God places them in the
same position as Abraham. Nor is it any different for
children of Christians in the new epoch. The covenant
promise of God today is the same promise of God's
fatherly love, the forgiveness of sins, and eternal life
made before to Abraham and it similarly embraces children
with their Christian parents. Christ's appearing and the
revelation which came through him and his apostles should
make us not less but more sure of the salvation of the
children of the covenant. [Schenck, pp. 910.
]
According to Calvin the infants of believing parents
belong to the church before they are engrafted into its
visible membership by baptism. The child of a Christian
parent is presumptively a Christian and an heir of
eternal life.
The offspring of believers are born holy, because
their children, while yet in
the womb, before they breathe the vital air, have been
adopted into the
covenant of eternal life. Nor are they brought into the
church by baptism on
any other ground than because they belonged to the body
of the Church
before they were born. He who admits aliens to baptism
profanes it.... For
how can it be lawful to confer the badge of Christ on
aliens from Christ.
Baptism must, therefore, be preceded by the gift of
adoption, which is not
the cause of half salvation merely, but gives salvation
entire; and this
salvation is afterwards ratified by Baptism
[Interim Adulterogermanum: cui adiecta
est vera Christianae Pacificationis et Ecclesiae
Reformandae Ratio. Per Joann. Calvinum. Corpus
Reformatorum, vol. 35, 619, cited by Schenck, p. 13.
Similarly Calvin says, '...the children of believers are
baptized not in order that they who were previously
strangers to the church may then for the first time
become children of God, but rather that, because by the
blessing of the promise they already belonged to the body
of Christ, they are received into the church with this
solemn sign.' Institutes, IV, xv, 22. ]
Calvin was, of course, entirely aware, that all
professions were not genuine and that many baptisms,
therefore, were empty. Only where the conditions of the
covenant were genuinely embraced should it be expected
that the Lord would confer its blessings.
Objections to Calvin's doctrine, especially as it
pertained to infant baptism, were raised from many sides
and his responses to those objections served to clarify
his meaning. To those who objected that infant children
were incapable of that spiritual regeneration which is
the prerequisite of baptism and, therefore, 'that
children are to be considered solely as children of Adam
until they reach an appropriate age for the second
birth,' Calvin replied that 'God's truth opposes all
these arguments.' [ Institutes, IV, xvi, 17;
Schenck, pp. 1518.] He appealed to the fact that
Christ summoned the little children to himself and called
them members of the kingdom, to the fact that there can
be no hope of salvation except one be engrafted into
Christ by regeneration and even his opponents did not
deny that infantswho are conceived in sin and
under the wrath of God can be saved, to the
fact that God's work in regenerating infants cannot be
denied by us simply because it remains beyond our
understanding, and to the fact that John the Baptist was
sanctified in his mother's womb. [ Institutes, IV,
xvi, 17.]
A related objection to Calvin's doctrine was that
faith should precede baptism but that infants were
incapable of faith and repentance. Calvin's reply again
referred the objectors to the fact that such
considerations did not appear to weigh with God
himself.
'...these darts are aimed more at God than at us. For
it is very clear from
many testimonies of Scripture that circumcision was also
a sign of
repentance. Then Paul calls it the seal of the
righteousness of faith....
For although infants, at the very moment they were
circumcised, did not
comprehend with their understanding what that sign meant,
they were
truly circumcised to the mortification of their corrupt
and defiled nature,
a mortification that they would afterward practice in
mature years. To sum
up, this objection can be solved without difficulty:
infants are baptized into
future repentance and faith, and even though these have
not yet been
formed in them, the seed of both lies hidden within them
by the secret
working of the Spirit.'[Institutes, IV, xvi, 20;
Schenck, pp. 1824.]
As he also puts it: '...let them only tell me...what
the danger is if infants be said to receive now some part
of that grace which in a little while they shall enjoy to
the full? ...why may the Lord not shine with a tiny spark
at the present time on those whom he will illumine in the
future with the full splendor of his
light...'[Institutes, IV, xvi, 19. ]
Schenck then proceeds to show that Calvin's doctrine
was substantially the same as that of Zwingli and
Bullinger, who likewise held that the children of
believers were to be reckoned the children of God because
they are embraced, as their parents, by the promise and
covenant of God. [Schenck, pp. 2327.] Further, this
same doctrine is that embodied in a variety of Reformed
confessions and catechisms and in the teaching of the
representatives of the mature Reformed theology,
including English Puritans and those of Presbyterian
Scotland. [ Schenck, pp. 2834.] Schenck's
conclusion is that 'at least until the time of the
Westminster Standards, there was no difference in the
views of the leading exponents of covenant theology and
those of John Calvin on the subject of children of the
covenant.' [Schenck, pp. 3452. Although this
statement is true only as a generality, it appears to be
substantially correct. Differences did appear, for
example, regarding the construction of the doctrine of
the ground of infant baptism and regarding what Calvin
called 'the seed of faith' in infants but 'for the most
part our Reformed divines followed the presentation of
Calvin, with many alterations in wording...' H.E.
Gravemeijer, Leesboek over de Gereformeerde
Geloofsleer, vol. 3, Utrecht, 1894, pp. 431432.
The consensus was challenged later in another way by the
assertion of certain Presbyterian authorities, such as
Rutherford and Brown of Wamphray, that it was desirable
that the church should include many who are presumably
unregenerate in hopes of their salvation. The peculiar
position of covenant children as generally understood in
Reformed theology was thereby undermined. A somewhat
similar view prevailed in New England in connection with
what came to be called 'the Halfway Covenant.'
These views were definite innovations, were roundly
rejected by other authorities such as Thomas Boston and,
later, Jonathan Edwards, and were never accepted or
adopted by any Presbyterian church. Cf. J. MacPherson,
The Doctrine of the Church in Scottish Theology,
Edinburgh, 1903, pp. 7490; J. Walker, The
Theology and Theologians of Scotland, Edinburgh,
reprinted 1982, pp. 121126.]
Schenck accounts for the modern eclipse of the
Reformed doctrine of covenant succession by the dramatic
impact of the Great Awakening and the resultant
revivalism, with its exclusive emphasis on a conscious
experience of conviction and conversion as the essential
evidence of genuine salvation. The background of the
revival, as is well known, was a nominalism in which
infant baptism was practiced without discrimination and
without regard to the necessity of covenantal
faithfulness. The often powerful experiences of
conversion common to the revival's leadership, most of
whom were themselves children of the covenant, combined
with similarly dramatic episodes of conviction of sin and
anguish of soul followed in time by joyful assurance of
peace with God on the part of many touched by the revival
created an expectation that true evangelical experience
would conform to these and eventually a demand that it
must. That a child was from a believing family made no
difference. Gilbert Tennent, for example, not only
preached the necessity of such an experience of
conviction and conversion as had become the revival
paradigm, but insisted that genuine believers will
inevitably know when they were not Christians. [ Cited in
Schenck, p. 71. See further L.H. Atwater, 'The Children
of the Church and Sealing Ordinances,' Biblical
Repertory and Princeton Review, vol. XXIX, No. 1
(Jan. 1857) pp. 1315. ]
Perfectly understandable as revivalistic thinking was,
both as a necessary corrective to the nominalism which
preceded it and as the natural result of such powerful
spiritual impressions as were common during the Great
Awakening, as a view of salvation and spiritual
experience it was an obvious overreaction,
onesided and seriously defective. In particular,
this thinking left little place for the divine provision
of covenant succession and in that, as I have
subsequently to show, subverted the Bible's clear and
emphatic teaching. Charles Hodge, speaking of a revival
of religion such as occurred during the Great Awakening,
wrote:
It may be highly useful, or even necessary, just as
violent remedies
are often the only means of saving life. But such
remedies are not
the ordinary and proper means of sustaining and promoting
health.
...No one can fail to remark that this too exclusive
dependance on
revivals tends to produce a false or unscriptural form of
religion....
The ordinary means of grace become insipid or
distasteful. ...Perhaps
however the most deplorable result of the mistake we are
now
considering is, the neglect which it necessarily induces
of the divinely
appointed means of careful Christian nurture. ...Family
training of
children, and pastoral instruction of the young, are
almost entirely
lost sight of. We have long felt and often expressed the
conviction
that this is one of the most serious evils in the present
state of our
churches.
[ 'Bushnell on Christian Nurture,' Biblical
Repertory and Princeton Review, vol. XIX, No. 4 (Oct.
1847) pp. 520521. ]
With regard to the issue of covenant succession
itself, L. H. Atwater, also of Princeton Seminary,
added:
Still, it is apparent that this great revival, while
it resulted in a great
and blessed increase of true piety...while it removed the
fungous
misgrowths which sloth and unbelief had educed from the
church
membership of baptized children; also, in many quarters,
unsettled
the faith of the Church in that pregnant truth, and its
logical and
practical relations. The fruit has appeared in the
distinguishing
features of our American Christianity for better and for
worse; in a
remarkable vigour of aggressive evangelism upon those
that are
without, and in too often putting without the fold the
lambs of the
flock, so far, alas! that immense numbers of them are
lost, past
recovery, upon the dark mountains of sin! The latter we
ought to
correct; the former we should hold fast, and let none
take our crown.
These things ought we to have done, and not to leave the
other
undone. [ Atwater, 'Children of the Church,' p.
16.]
The tendencies fostered in the Great Awakening were
given further impetus in the revival of 1800 and others
which followed in the first half of the 19th century.
These were then institutionalized in the revivalist
paradigm of the experience of salvation which quickly
become dominant in American evangelicalism.
The penetration of revivalist thinking into the
Presbyterian Church, Schenck argues, created a situation
in which
Many influential leaders and a large popular
constituency held
the historical Reformed doctrine of the significance of
infant baptism
in a 'nonnatural sense.' Many held that children of
the covenant
were only 'quasi' members of the church. There was no
trace or
recognition of a vital church relation until, by
conscious conversion,
they came 'out of the world.'
[Schenck, p. 80. Schenck is citing Atwater, 'Children
of the Church,' pp. 67, who continues: 'We are sure
it is no exaggeration, when we say, that in a
considerable portion of our evangelical Churches there is
no recognition, no consciousness of any relation being
held by baptized children, prior to conscious and
professed conversion, other than that of outsiders to the
church, in common with the whole world lying in
wickednessat least that portion of the world
which, having the light of the gospel, heeds it not.
...Whenever they see their way clear to profess their
faith, and come to the Lord's table, it is regarded as
joining the Church, just as if they had never belonged to
it. No difference is put between them and the unbaptized,
in the apprehensions, the procedures, the whole practical
life of the Church, except that the latter, in joining
its fellowship, receive the initiatory rite, which they
have never received before. One great evil of this
inadequate system is, that while it makes infant baptism
a seal of Christian teaching and training, to be given
the child, it always, in some degree, and often wholly,
prevents such instruction and nurture, or frustrates
their efficacy. And this, in our opinion, is among the
most formidable barriers to the growth and prevalence of
pure religion in the rising generation.']
Schenck cites J. W. Alexander, L. H. Atwater, Ashbel
Green, Samuel Miller, and Charles Hodge, among others,
whose voices were raised in protest against the growing
tendency to consider baptized children as though they
were out of the church and to neglect the church's
historic doctrine of covenant succession.
Nevertheless, at the same time powerful voices were
raised within the church in defense of the new thinking.
Especially among southern men, notably J.H. Thornwell and
R. L Dabney, it was held decidedly that baptized covenant
children were to be presumed unsaved until they gave
evidence of the new birth. This altered conception of
covenant children was given theological justification by
constructions of the doctrines of the covenant of grace
and infant baptism which introduced a clear distinction
between the status of covenant children and professing
Christians. [ Schenck, pp. 8489.]
These differing conceptions of the meaning and
significance of covenant succession collided in the
discussions, begun in 1857, regarding a proposed revision
of the Book of Discipline. Dr. Thornwell, chairman of the
committee, whose membership also included Charles Hodge,
prepared the draft of the revision which was
controversial in only one point: the relation of baptized
children to the church. Dr. Thornwell's revision provided
that 'only those...who have made a profession of faith in
Christ are proper subjects of judicial prosecution.' It
was understood on all sides that opinions on this
specific question regarding church discipline took on an
unusual importance as reflecting more fundamental
conceptions of the covenant and church. Those supportive
of the proposed revision, with the difference in status
which it introduced between covenant children and those
who had professed their faith, held that this difference
in status was of such consequence that the two classes of
baptized persons could not be regarded or treated in the
same way. Covenant children and adult professors were
thus related to the church in an entirely different way
and according to fundamentally different principles. Dr.
Thornwell argued in regard to covenant children:
It is clear that while they are in the church by
external union, in
the spirit and temper of their minds they belong to the
world. Like
Esau, they neither understand nor prize their birthright.
Of
the world and in the Churchthis expresses
precisely their
status, and determines the mode in which the church
should deal
with them.
[ 'The Revised Book Vindicated,' The Collected
Writings of James Henley Thornwell, vol. 4,
reprinted, Edinburgh, 1974, p. 340. According to
Thornwell, 'The two classes of which the Church consists
are not equally related to the idea of the Church. The
class of professors pertains to its essence; that of
nonprofessors is an accidental result of the mode
of organization.' (p. 339).]
Grace was offered to them in their baptism and the
task of the church was the conversion of her baptized
children. The position of covenant children, in this
view, was a position of privilege and special
opportunity. It was definitely not the communion of the
saints. In the most fundamental respects the church's
children were of the world not the church. Thornwell went
so far as to say that the church is to treat her
children
Precisely as she treats all other impenitent and
unbelieving men
she is to exercise the power of the keys, and shut them
out from
the communion of the saints. She is to debar them from
all the
privileges of the inner sanctuary. She is to exclude them
from their
inheritance until they show themselves meet to possess
it. [ 'The Revised Book,' p. 341.]
He likened the church's situation to that of a
commonwealth of free citizens in which is found a body of
slaves who are marked for eventual liberty. 'Is it not
clear,' he asks, 'that their condition, as slaves,
determines their treatment...until they are prepared to
pass the test which changes their status?' He
continues:
Is not this precisely the state of things with the
Church and its
baptized unbelievers? Are they not the slaves of sin and
the Devil,
existing in a free Commonwealth for the purpose of being
educated
to the liberty of the saints? Should they not, then, be
carefully
instructed on the one hand, and on the other be treated
according
to their true character as slaves, in every other
respect, until they are prepared for
their heritage of liberty?'
['The Revised Book,' p. 348. A helpful discussion of
this and related questions as they were discussed in 19th
century American Presbyterianism is furnished by D.
Jones, The Doctrine of the Church in American
Presbyterian Theology in the MidNineteenth
Century, ThD thesis, Concordia Seminary, 1970, pp.
4986.]
Thornwell maintained that his views were those of the
historic Reformed church. [Thornwell's attempt to
demonstrate that claim by citations (pp. 350363) is
severely compromised by an anachronistic reading of the
sources and, still more, by his assumption that his view
of the status of covenant children was necessarily shared
by those who may have, for other reasons, shared his
conclusions regarding their susceptibility to church
censures. Further, it is not difficult to find contrary
evidence on the point at issue. C. Mather, Magnalia
Christi Americana, vol. 2, reprinted, Edinburgh,
1979, p. 290. A.W. Miller, a prominent southern
Presbyterian, opposed Thornwell at this point precisely
on the ground that his views were not those of the
Reformed Church. Addressing the General Assembly of 1866,
Miller argued: 'This principle should ever be kept in
mind, that baptism is not conferred on children in order
that they may become sons and heirs of God, but because
they are already considered by God as occupying that
place and rank, the grace of adoption is sealed in their
flesh by the rite of baptism.' This, Miller argued, was
Calvin's doctrine and that of the Reformed Church
historically. Schenck, p. 96.] The unlikelihood of that
claim may have had much to do with the success of Charles
Hodge in forestalling the adoption of the proposed
revision until the church was divided between north and
south in 1861. As Schenck argues, Hodge was surely
correct in insisting that the historic doctrine of the
Presbyterian church was 'that the child of Christian
parents, no less than the adult who made a personal and
voluntary profession of faith, was a member of the church
on the same basis of presumptive membership in the
invisible church.' Consequently, Hodge argued, 'we see
not how this principle can be denied, in its application
to the Church, without giving up our whole doctrine, and
abandoning the ground to the Independents and
Anabaptists.' [Cited in Schenck, p. 99. Further see
Charles Hodge's critique of Thornwell's position in
The Church and its Polity, London, 1879, pp.
215217.] Dr. Thornwell's position was not that of
Presbyterianism historically but was materially that of
revivalism.
Schenck's thesis, that the classical doctrine of
covenant succession was in the 18th and 19th century
overwhelmed by the extension of the revivalist paradigm
of a crisis of conversion to the church's children was,
of course, by no means original to him. His exposition,
as already indicated, relied heavily on the analyses of
Charles Hodge, L. H. Atwater, Samuel Miller, and others.
But this same thesis was still more comprehensively and
popularly advanced by the Congregationalist Horace
Bushnell in his Christian Nurture, first published
in 1847 as Discourses on Christian Nurture and
subsequently considerably enlarged and often reprinted.
As Williston Walker wrote in an introduction to the
edition of 1916, Bushnell 'strove to correct [the
onesidedness of the revival impulse] and to
vindicate for Christian childhood its normal place in the
Kingdom of God. In so doing he adopted positions
consonant with the great historic experience of the
church, however little in agreement with the local
American outlook of his time.' In fact, Bushnell's
eloquent and weighty book, notwithstanding its serious
deficiencies, is of abiding value and deserves a wide
readership today, especially among ministers. It exists
virtually alone as a fullscale examination of the
nurture of covenant children in its theological,
psychological, [ C. Hodge expressed a special
appreciation for Bushnell's development of the power of
parental influence upon a childby 'the look,
the voice, the handling'even before the
development of the child's reasoning. Essays and
Reviews, p. 312, cited in Schenck, p. 143. R.L.
Dabney developed some of these same themes in a splendid
sermon, preached in 1879, 'Parental Responsibilities,'
reprinted in Discussions: Evangelical and
Theological, vol. 1, London, 1967, pp. 676693.]
and sociological aspects.
Bushnell's theology was in several respects wholly
unacceptable to the conservative Presbyterians, which
makes only the more noteworthy the general pleasure with
which they welcomed his book. Reviews by Charles Hodge,
Lyman Atwater, and Henry B. Smith were generally
appreciative. [ Lyman Atwater, in his own article devoted
to Bushnell, wrote: 'In its way [Christian
Nurture] was another instance of the attempted
recovering, in a partial and distorted way, of a truth
which was grievously fading out of sight in Dr.
Bushnell's surroundings. This was cordially recognized in
leading Presbyterian reviews of the book.'
Presbyterian Review, vol. 2, No. 5 (Jan. 1881) p.
128.] They all agreed with Bushnell's general thesis that
Christian nurture in a godly home, beginning in infancy,
is the divine instrumentality of the salvation of the
church's children and that this nurture was the primary
method appointed for the propagating of the church. They
were further agreed, however, that Bushnell's manner of
stating his thesis left the impression that the saving
operations of the Spirit of God were confined to natural
laws of parental influence and did not do justice to the
necessity of the immediate working of the Spirit to
overcome the native sinfulness of every covenant child. [
C. Hodge, 'Bushnell on Christian Nurture,' pp.
502539. It is to be noted that a view of infancy
and childhood which does not take adequate account of
original sin is hardly unique to Bushnell, being found
already in the apostolic fathers and widely thereafter.
Cf. S. Legasse, Jesus et L'Enfant: 'Enfants', 'Petits'
et 'Simples' dans la Tradition Synoptique (Etudes
Bibliques), Paris, 1969, pp. 269276.]
The thesis advanced by these several authors that the
classical Reformed doctrine of covenant succession and
Christian nurture was largely displaced in the American
Presbyterian Church by the revivalist requirement of an
experience of conscious conversion and by a corresponding
alteration in the status of covenant children, is, in my
judgment, substantially correct. The doctrine of
Thornwell is definitely not the doctrine of Calvin nor is
his view of the church's task in respect to children of
the covenant that of the great reformer. The difference
is profound. Yet Thornwell's views more nearly
approximate the unstudied opinion of most evangelical
Presbyterians today, not because they intend to follow
Thornwell against Calvin, but because of the
compatibility of his views with that of revivalist
thought and practice which thoroughly penetrated
conservative Presbyterian thought and life in the 19th
and 20th centuries, displacing the historic Presbyterian
viewpoint.
My own experiences growing up in conservative
Presbyterian circles and my observation since confirm
this. The doctrine of covenant succession with its
various parts and implications has been largely in
eclipse. In the individual circumstances where covenantal
nurture in a Reformed sense has not been supplanted by
evangelism as the paradigm of childrearing, this is
more often the result of instinct than conviction, rarely
the result of comprehensive instruction. Inattention to
the doctrine of covenant succession, an evangelism which
makes no significant distinctions between the church's
children and those outside of the community of faith, a
widespread hesitation to charge Christian parents with
responsibility for the unbelief of their children, a
doctrine and practice of infant baptism which bears
little living connection to the practical approach taken
to covenant children subsequently, covenant children
themselves who have little sense of the immensity of
their blessing, and an almost universal practice of
permitting baptized young people living in rebellion
against the gospel and law of their covenant God to walk
out of the church unmolested, as if they had never
genuinely belonged, never having 'joined the
church' all this is only a partial
demonstration of the extent to which the contemporary
Presbyterian church has lost touch with its own
doctrine.
Nevertheless, in my judgment, the thesis of Hodge,
Schenck, and others does require modification in this
respect: they have somewhat overstated the extent to
which the doctrine of covenant succession was given its
rightful place and emphasis in the formative period of
the Reformed theology. Schenck is, I believe, largely
correct in his claim that covenant succession by nurture
was the doctrine of the Reformed church from Calvin
through the period of the great scholastic systems.
[Though A. Kuyper's formulation of the doctrine is
problematic, it was not the mistake it is sometimes
represented to be that he regarded covenant succession as
an essential mark and ingredient of the Reformed
theology. Cf. C. Graafland, Van Calvijn tot Barth:
Oorsprong en ontwikkeling van de leer der verkiezing in
het Gereformeerd Protestantisme, 'sGravenhage,
1987, p. 294 and C. Veenhof, Prediking en
Uitverkiezing, Kampen, 1959, pp.
283286.]
It is not difficult to trace the consensus on this
point through the theological literature of the period.
While not copious, the attention devoted to this matter
in the creeds and catechisms is sufficient to indicate
that the convictions to which Calvin had given expression
in his Institutes were soon received as part of
the Reformed theology, if not in every case with the same
emphasis and consistency. In particular, confessional
status was granted to the affirmations that covenant
children are Christians, that they are baptized because
the power and substance of the sacrament belongs to them,
that they are heirs of the same blessing promised to
their parents, that they are capable of regeneration and
of the 'seed of faith,' and that, should they die in
infancy, they are saved. [Calvin's Geneva
Catechism, Questions 336339; The Heidelberg
Catechism, Question 74; Craig's Catechism [ Q.
What if our children die without baptism? A. Then they
are saved by the promise. Q. Why are they baptised, when
they are young and do not understand? A. Because they are
of the seed of the faithful. Q. What comfort do we have
in their Baptism? A. This, that we rest persuaded that
they are inheritors of the Kingdom of Heaven. Q. What
should that work in us? A. Diligence in teaching them the
way of salvation. Q. What admonition are they given
through this Baptism? A. That they are to be thankful
when they come to age. Q. What then is Baptism for our
children? A. An entry into the Church of God, and to the
Holy Supper]; The Belgic Confession, Article 34;
The Scots Confession (1560), Article
XVI.]
Neither the Westminster Confession nor the two
catechisms provide as complete a statement of this
doctrine as may be found in other Reformed symbols, but
the Directory of Worship does provide a more definitive
statement of the thinking of the Westminster Assembly
concerning the status of covenant children.
In the service of baptism therein described the
sacrament is defined as 'a seal of the covenant of grace,
of our ingrafting into Christ, and of our union with him,
of remission of sins, regeneration, adoption, and life
eternal.' Concerning the ground of infant baptism it is
said, among other things, that
'the promise is made to believers and their seed; and
that the seed and posterity of the faithful, born within
the church, have, by their birth, interest in the
covenant, and right to the seal of it, and to the outward
privileges of the church...That the Son of God admitted
little children into his presence, embracing and blessing
them, saying, "For of such is the kingdom of God": That
children, by baptism, are solemnly received into the
bosom of the visible church, distinguished from the
world, and them that are without, and united with
believers; and that all who are baptized in the name of
Christ, do renounce, and by their baptism are bound to
fight against the devil, the world, and the flesh: That
they are Christians, and federally holy before
baptism...That the inward grace and virtue of baptism is
not tied to that very moment of time wherein it is
administered; and that the fruit and power thereof
reacheth to the whole course of our life...'
The minister is to admonish the parent 'To consider
the great mercy of God to him and his child; to bring up
the child in the knowledge of the grounds of the
Christian religion, and in the nurture and admonition of
the Lord; and to let him know the danger of God's wrath
to himself and child, if he be negligent: requiring his
solemn promise for the performance of his
duty.'
After the sacrament, the minister's prayer begins with
the acknowledgement of the Lord's mercy: 'that he is good
and gracious, not only in that he numbereth us among his
saints, but is pleased also to bestow upon our children
this singular token and badge of his love in Christ:
That, in his truth and special providence, he daily
bringeth some into the bosom of his church, to be
partakers of his inestimable benefits...' It then
continues with this petition:
'That [the Lord] would receive the infant now
baptized, and solemnly entered into the household of
faith, into his fatherly tuition and defence, and
remember him with the favour that he sheweth to his
people...and if he live, and attain the years of
discretion, that the Lord would so teach him by his word
and Spirit, and make his baptism effectual to him, and so
uphold him by his divine power and grace, that by faith
he may prevail against the devil, the world, and the
flesh, till in the end he obtain a full and final
victory...'
This, I admit, is less than might have been said and
less than Calvin did say. But it is his doctrine of
covenant succession in its broad outline. Further, it is
easy enough to locate in dogmatic works, especially in
the loci devoted to calling or regeneration and baptism,
more or less complete statements of the doctrine of
covenant succession. An example would be this lovely
passage from Witsius' The Economy of the Divine
Covenants:
Here certainly appears the extraordinary love of our
God, in that
as soon as we are born, and just as we come from our
mother, he
hath commanded us to be solemnly brought from her bosom
as it
were into his own arms, that he should bestow upon us, in
the very
cradle, the tokens of our dignity and future kingdom;
that he should
put that song into our mouth, 'Thou didst make me hope,
when I
was upon my mother's breast: I was cast upon thee from
the womb:
thou art my God from my mother's belly,' Ps. xxii. 9, 10,
that, in a
word, he should join us to himself in the most solemn
covenant
from our most tender years: the remembrance of which, as
it is
glorious and full of consolation to us, so in like manner
it tends to
promote Christian virtues, and the strictest holiness,
through the
whole course of our lives.
Nothing ought to be dearer to us than to keep sacred and
inviolable
that covenant of our youth, that first and most solemn
engagement,
that was made to God in our name.
[ET 1837, vol. 2, p. 440. Herman Witsius himself was
the son of godly parents who had dedicated their
firstborn to the Christian ministry before he was born.
In the dedication of one of his first works,
Practijcke des Christendoms (1665), he paid
tribute to the spiritual nurture which he had received
from his parents, making the words of Proverbs
4:35a his own. J. van Genderen, Herman
Witsius, 'sGravenhage, 1953, pp.
78.]
But, the general consensus notwithstanding, the
doctrine of covenant succession was never as
comprehensively developed or as thoroughly integrated
into the theological system as it could and should have
been nor was it as emphatically stated as it deserved to
be. Its connections with other parts of the system were
never completely delineated and certain difficulties were
left inadequately furnished with satisfactory
resolutions. It did not receive sufficient attention to
ensure that the rough edges left in the original
theological construction of the Reformation era would be
made smooth. Indeed, while great effort was made to
defend, elaborate, and polish certain doctrines, this was
left largely in its original form. Indeed, there seems to
have been in some cases a diminishment of Calvin's own
emphatic presentation of the doctrine. That this is so
may be demonstrated in several ways.
In a goodly number of manuals of Reformed theology and
monographs on Reformed soteriology, the doctrine of
covenant succession is given only cursory treatment.
Either attention is devoted to only a few of its parts
or, worse, the doctrine appears only as part of the
argumentation for paedobaptism. [In H. Heppe's summation
of the Reformed theology, consideration of the doctrine
of covenant succession, in one respect or another,
appears but briefly and only, so far as I could
determine, in connection with the discussion of the
calling or regeneration of infants and that of infant
baptism. Reformed Dogmatics set out and illustrated
from the Sources, ET London, 1950, pp. 540541;
621624. Popular manuals such as those of Ames
(The Marrow of Theology, Boston, ET 1968, pp.
179180; 211) or Wollebius (Christianae
Theologiae Compendium [1626] reprinted, Neukirchen,
1935, pp. 88, 93, 116.) give only meagre attention and
that in the form of brief standardized affirmations in
the customary loci.] It cannot be said that the
exposition of this doctrine in the Reformed literature
leaves the clear impression that covenant succession
through parental nurture is the principle way in which
salvation comes to the elect of God. Parental nurture
finds no regular place in the treatment of the means of
grace, neither faith nor justification are regularly
treated so as to accommodate those doctrines to the
reality that the largest number of Christians in the
world do not receive the gift of faith only subsequently
to a life of conscious rebellion against God and by means
of a crisis of conversion, and that in very many if not
most cases justification precedes a conscious experience
of conviction of sin and guilt. [Kuyper calls this the
'weak spot' in much Reformed discussion of justification.
Always there is this exception, whether stated or
unstated: 'loquor de adultis.' Dictaten Dogmatiek,
vol. IV, Kampen, n.d., pp. 6263.] The entire
treatment of the ordo salutis in this literature is
characteristically written as if, in fact, the typical
experience of salvation were that of the person called
out of the world only after he or she gained full
possession of rational and spiritual powers.
[Interestingly, the exception to this generality is that
of the case of infants dying in infancy which, no doubt
due to the punishing necessities of life in those days,
did receive a more careful consideration. Reformed
writers, many of whom had suffered such losses
themselves, expressed themselves with great confidence
and often with an exquisite pathos in regard to this one
part of the doctrine of covenant succession. Upon the
death of his daughter Katherine, at that time the
youngest of his children, Thomas Boston wrote: 'I never
had such a clear and comfortable view of the Lord's
having other use for children than our comfort; for which
ends he removes them in infancy; so that they are not
brought to the world in vain. I saw reason to bless the
Lord, that I had been made father of six children, now in
the grave, and that were with me but a very short time;
but none of them lost; I will see them all at the
resurrection. That clause in the covenant, "And the God
of thy seed" was sweet and full of sap.' The Complete
Works of Thomas Boston, vol. XII, reprinted,
Wheaton,1980, pp. 278279. Rutherford, in a number
of his immortal letters, bent his genius to bring the
Reformed theology with its wonderful consolation home to
grieving parents. Letters of Samuel Rutherford,
reprinted, Edinburgh, 1984, Letters 28, 238, 287, 300,
310, 326. Conclusions bearing on this subject were
integrated at several points in the theological system.
However, the bearing of those same considerations on the
case of infants who lived to and beyond the age of
discretion did not seem to be as clearly grasped, at
least with respect to the necessity of theological
integration. Reformed treatments of the doctrine of the
salvation of infants dying in infancy and its integration
into the larger soteriology are furnished by R.A. Webb,
The Theology of Infant Salvation, reprinted,
Harrisonburg, 1981, and B.B. Warfield, 'The Development
of the Doctrine of Infant Salvation,' The Works of
Benjamin B. Warfield, vol. IX, New York, 1932, pp.
411444. These works are tarnished, however, both by
the consideration of infants dying in infancy as a
separate class whose status is governed by separate
principlesa position for which only the most
doubtful of Scriptural support has ever been
advancedand by the still more doubtful
conclusion that in this class of infants the difference
between covenant infants and infants outside of the
covenant is immaterial.]
It cannot be doubted that this is, in large part, the
consequence of Scripture's own emphasis upon paradigmatic
conversions, especially that of the apostle Paul, and the
fact that the New Testament's historical narrative of the
history of salvation covers only a brief period of
evangelization of hitherto unreached people, a period,
that is, before covenant nurture could begin to supply
the fledgling church of the new epoch with large numbers
of members. [The number of references to children in the
New Testament is not large. It is striking, however,
that, taken together, what references there are serve
simply to reiterate the commonplaces of the Old
Testament's doctrine. There is definitely no new doctrine
of children or of their status in the New Testament.]
Nevertheless, taking the Scripture's evidence together,
as I hope to demonstrate below, it cannot be to the
credit of the Reformed theology that so often its
treatment of the doctrine of covenant succession has the
appearance of a concession rather than an affirmation of
central importance.
Furthermore, the same understatement and lack of full
integration can be observed in the popular literature.
Again, it is not difficult to find sermonic and pastoral
material in which the Reformed consensus is expressed.
For example, in Richard Baxter's A Christian
Directory, the most comprehensive work of Puritan
pastoral theology, the doctrine of covenant succession by
nurture is the basis of his consideration of the motives
and means of the spiritual upbringing of children.
[Reprinted, Ligonier, PA, 1990, pp. 409431;
449454. Other examples include Thomas Manton's
sermon on Ps 102:28, The Complete Works of Thomas
Manton, vol. 15, reprinted, Worthington, PA, n.d.,
pp. 463474 and William Guthrie's classic exposition
of true faith in Christ, The Christian's Great
Interest, reprinted, Edinburgh, 1969, pp. 3839.
Guthrie acknowledges that some Christians are called to
faith in Christ from the womb and have no experience of
being prepared for conversion by the work of the law,
such as would ordinarily be the case for someone called
out of a life of unbelief. An exposition with many
similarities to Baxter's was published in 1679 in
Amsterdam by J. Koelman, a major figure of the Nadere
Reformatie, whose thought was deeply influenced by
English Puritanism. De Plichten der Ouders in Kinderen
voor Godt op te voeden, reprinted, Houten, 1982.
Koelman readily acknowledges the possibility of
regeneration in the womb, even urges parents to pray for
it during pregnancy (p. 42). He is further better than
most in laying emphasis upon the fundamental place which
parents' faith in God's promise to be their children's
God and Savior occupies in a true covenantal nurture (pp.
4647).] In the course of his treatment of these
subjects, he affirms that the children of believers
belong to the Lord, that they are engaged in their
baptism to the life of faith, and that parental nurture
is the ordinary appointed means of their salvation. His
exposition of parental nurture, especially in its
psychological aspects, anticipates the larger study of
Bushnell.
But it must be said that the Puritan emphasis upon a
sound conversion more often than not overwhelmed these
sometimes virtually parenthetical concessions that the
experience of covenant children did not always conform to
the standard paradigm. When J.I. Packer, [A Quest for
Godliness: The Puritan Vision of the Christian Life,
Wheaton, 1990, p. 172. Bavinck provides a striking
example of this phenomenon in an autobiographical
reference concerning childhood in the separatist Dutch
Reformed churches. V. Hepp, Dr. Herman Bavinck,
Amsterdam, 1921, pp. 2223.] in his sympathetic but
not uncritical account of the Puritan emphasis on gospel
experience writes: 'All the Puritans agreed that the way
by which God brings sinners to faith is through a
"preparatory work", longer or shorter, of contrition and
humbling for sin' he does not mean to exclude the
experience of many covenant children whose experience is
otherwise. Neither did the Puritans themselves who
generally spoke in the same way. But, unwittingly or not,
the diminishment of covenant succession as a primary
instrumentality and distinctive experience of divine
grace was the result. This left the doctrine vulnerable
to the counterinfluences of the revival
period.
THE DOCTRINE OF COVENANT SUCCESSION IN SCRIPTURE
Interesting and valuable as an
historicaltheological account of the Reformed
doctrine of covenant succession and its development and
present fortunes may be, to Presbyterians the fundamental
issue must remain the teaching of Holy Scripture. The
eclipse of this doctrine and the distinctive
childrearing derived from it should be chiefly
dismaying to Presbyterians not because it amounts to an
abandonment of their theological tradition, but because
Holy Scripture is straightforward in developing this
doctrine in its various parts and emphatic in describing
its momentous consequences. The doctrine of covenant
succession was founded on the plain statements of the
Bible and the drift away from the former amounts to a
betrayal of the latter. The power and persuasiveness of
the Reformed theology has always derived from the
simplicity and clarity with which it reproduces the
Bible's teaching, from the straight line which connected
it to biblical commonplaces.
The Biblical data themselves yield a series of
conclusions which, taken together, form an anatomy of the
biblical doctrine of covenant succession. That doctrine
itself presupposes that the family, as biblically
described, is by divine appointment the fundamental
principle of organization of human life. From the
beginning to the end of Holy Scripture it is by the
commandment, the wisdom, and the kindness of God that he
'sets the lonely in families' (Ps. 68:6). The
significance attached in Scripture to family
relationships and connections requires no
demonstration.
It is a principle the validity of which is as easy to
demonstrate in contemporary life as from Holy Scripture.
Not only do children derive their appearance,
intelligence, physical health, etc. from their
parentsall which bear so mightily on the
outcome of one's lifebut, likewise, they are
greatly influenced for good or ill by the family
environment and quality of parental nurture. But
Scripture goes further in teaching that God weaves his
purposes of grace and judgment within the threads of an
individual's family life. The family is not the sole
instrumentality of the divine purpose, of course, but it
is of vast importance. ['...the family..is the New
Testament basis of the Church of God. ...[God] does,
indeed, require individual faith for salvation; but He
organizes His people in families first; and then into
churches, recognizing in their very warp and woof the
family constitution. His promises are all the more
precious that they are to us and our children. And though
this may not fit in with the growing individualism of the
day, it is God's ordinance.' B.B. Warfield, 'The Polemics
of Infant Baptism,' The Works of Benjamin B.
Warfield, vol. IX, New York, 1932, pp. 405406.
Herman Bavinck, who was himself raised in a Christian
home and often bore witness to the happy effect of his
parents' instruction and godly example, offers this
panegyric to the family in his 'Het Christelijk
Huisgezin.'
'The family is not of man's making; it is a gift of
God and full of life. Upbringing in the family bears a
quite special character. No school or educational
institution can replace or compensate for the family.
"Everything educates in the family, the handshake of the
father, the voice of the mother, the older brother, the
younger sister, the baby in the cradle, the sick loved
one, the grandparents and the grandchildren, the uncles
and the aunts, the guests and friends, prosperity and
adversity, the feast day and the day of mourning, Sundays
and workdays, the prayer and the thanksgiving at the
table and the reading of God's Word, the morning and
evening prayer. Everything is engaged to educate one
another, from day to day, from hour to hour,
unintentionally, without previously devised plan, method
or system. From everything proceeds an educative
influence though it can neither be analyzed nor
calculated. A thousand insignificant things, a thousand
trifles, a thousand details, all have their effect. It is
life itself that here educates, life in its greatness,
the rich, inexhaustible, universal life. The family is
the school of life, because there is its spring and its
hearth.' In A.B.W.M. Kok, Herman Bavinck,
Amsterdam, 1945, pp. 1819.] This becomes all the
more apparent as the doctrine of covenant succession is
constructed on the foundation of this family
solidarity.
The doctrine of covenant succession as it is taught in
Holy Scripture, as all other doctrines, is composed of
parts, each of which must be integrated with each of the
others.
I. Grace runs in the lines of generations.
This is not only a principle which can be persuasively
demonstrated in any church, but is a biblical
commonplace. It is a fact emphasized at the headwaters of
revelation. Immediately following the dismal report of
the generations descending from Cain, whose own
viciousness comes to its ugly consummation in Lamech, is
the genealogical record of 'the sons of God' ,
generations of righteous fathers and sons from Seth to
Noah, with Enoch a luminary among them (Gen.
4:76:2). Subsequently the Scripture offers numerous
examples of similar successions of faith and godliness:
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph; Boaz, Jesse, David,
and Solomon; Lois, Eunice, and Timothy, etc. The number
of faithful men and women of biblical history whose
lineage is provided with sufficient detail to determine
that they were the children of Godfearing parents
is very large, including most of the faithful kings of
Judah, most of the heros of faith mentioned by name in
Hebrews 11, and such New Testament figures as John the
Baptist, the Lord himself, and Mark the Evangelist. No
doubt many other such men and women, the spirituality of
whose parentage is not indicated in the Bible, were the
products of believing households.
What is customary in Scripture is likewise a fact
everywhere to be observed in subsequent history. In the
early church the faith of Polycarp, Origen, Chrysostom,
and Augustine, to name but a prominent few, lived first
in their parent or parents [Paeon and Euelpistus were two
Christians martyred with Justin c. A.D. 165. They were
asked by their inquistor where they learned their
Christianity. Paeon replied, 'From our parents we
received this good confession.' Euelpistus said, 'I
willingly heard the words of Justin. But from my parents
also I learned to be a Christian.' The Martyrdom of
Justin Martyr, ANF, vol. 1, p. 306.]. This succession
of faith continued in the modern era. Thomas Boston used
to spend days and nights in prison with his covenanter
father. Donald Cargill, the Presbyterian martyr is
reported to have told his accusers: 'I have been a fearer
of God from my infancy.' [J. Howie, Lives of the
Scottish Covenanters, reprinted, Greenville, 1981, p.
391.] Matthew Henry was the product of a godly
Presbyterian manse. The Wesleys were the sons of a most
pious and spiritually principled mother as was John
Newton, as was a hero of mine, Alexander Whyte. The
modern missions effort has been carried on the backs of
sons and daughters of the covenant. William Carey, Robert
Morrison, David Livingstone, and John Paton were all the
products of godly homes. [There is an especially
exquisite account of the spiritual world which John
Paton's devout parents provided for their children and
the force of their instruction and example in his
autobiography, John G. Paton: Missionary to the New
Hebrides, reprinted, Edinburgh, 1965, pp. 326.]
Jim Elliot is a recent example. [E. Elliot, The Shadow
of the Almighty, New York, 1958, pp. 2327.] In
the church history of America it is no different. Godly
successions such as that of Richard, Increase, and Cotton
Mather or Charles, Archibald Alexander, and Caspar Wistar
Hodge, [The latter was the grandson of Charles, the
nephew of Archibald Alexander, indicating the width as
well as the depth of piety in the Hodge line.] or that of
the family of Jonathan Edwards are everywhere to be
found. [On the Christian patrimony of Jonathan Edwards
consult I. Murray, Jonathan Edwards: A New
Biography, Edinburgh, 1987, pp. 39. On the
manner in which Edwards bequeathed the same to his own
children, see pp. 401420.] And what is true of
notable Christians is no less so of great multitudes of
believers of little or no reputation. I pastor a church
rich with evidence of the fact that grace runs in the
lines of generations. I am myself the third in a line of
believing ministers in my Presbyterian family. [When I
came to my present pastorate I was delighted to discover
that one of the elders of the congregation was the son of
a man who had been converted through the preaching of my
grandfather in 1914, becoming thereby the first Christian
in his family. This elder's daughter is also a member of
the congregation and now has children of her own who are
being raised in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.]
The evidence for this principle of succession in grace
can be collected from every theological tradition, from
every Christian denomination, and from every period of
church history. It is as surely the experience of
Christians who would repudiate covenant succession as a
theological principle as it is of those who embrace it.
The families of Charles Spurgeon, Billy Graham, or Paul
Crouch serve the point as well as those of Abraham Kuyper
or J. Gresham Machen. I do not hesitate to claim that far
and away the largest part of the Christian church at any
time or placeexcepting that historical moment
when the gospel first reaches a place and
peopleare those who were born and raised in
Christian families and that this is true whether one is
considering Christendom as an outward phenomenon or only
the company of the faithful followers of
Christ.
II. It is God's will and declared purpose that his
saving grace run in the lines of generations.
The remarkable phenomenon of succession of Christian
faith through generations, fundamental as it is to the
life of the church in the world, is provided a
comprehensive explanation in Holy Scripture. It is
neither an actual coincidence that the largest number of
Christians have Christian parents nor is it simply a
phenomenon left unaccounted for. Everywhere in the Bible
the Lord declares it to be his purpose that Christian
marriages produce a holy seed (Mal. 2:15). One of the
primary features of the covenant the Lord established
with his people is that it embraces families and has
always in view the continuation of its saving blessing
for generations to come (Gen. 17:79). The place
this feature occupies in the divine economy of salvation
is indicated by its comprehensive and emphatic
reiteration throughout Scripture (e.g. Exod. 20:6; Deut.
4:3740; Ps. 100:5, 102:28, 103:1718; Isa.
44:3, 54:13, 59:21, 65:23; Jer. 32:3839,35:19;
Ezek. 37:25; Zech. 10:67; Acts 2:3839,
16:1415, 31). It must be plainly stated that the
promise made to the children of the covenant is not that
of a special status of privilege but is precisely the
promise of the gospel, eternal life in heaven. Whether
the form of the promise is that God should be their God
(Gen. 17:7), or that he will extend to them his
righteousness (Ps. 103:17), or his Spirit (Isa. 59:21),
or his forgiveness (Acts 2:3839), or his salvation
(Acts 16:31), the covenant which thus embraces the
children with their believing parents is the covenant of
grace. [This assertion is, without question, the pivot
upon which the entire discussion of the doctrine of
covenant succession must revolve. It is for this reason
above all others, that one can speak of a Reformed
consensus, because Reformed theology did recognize from
the beginning that the promise God made to Abraham and
his seed was, as Paul confirms, nothing more nor less
than the gospel. It was on this ground that they held
that covenant infants, dying in infancy, must be saved.
For God to be that infant's God and yet that infant not
be saved would make a travesty of the Lord's promise and
empty his words of all meaning. 'To be our God' is the
Scripture's way to comprehend the whole of eternal
salvation in the fewest words. The predicament of the
unbeliever is precisely that he is 'without God in the
world' (Eph. 2: 12) and heaven is the place where God is
our God and we are his people (Rev. 21:3). This point was
not missed in Reformed theological reflection, however
much its implications may not always have been adequately
elaborated. Cf. C. Hodge, Systematic Theology,
vol. 2, reprinted, Cambridge, 1960, pp. 365366; J.
Owen, The Works of John Owen, vol. xi, reprinted,
Edinburgh, 1965, pp. 204225; and, with particular
application to the matter of covenant children, L.
Atwater, 'The Children of the Covenant, and their "Part
in the Lord",' Biblical Repertory and Princeton
Review, vol. XXXV, no. 4 (Oct. 1863) pp.
622643. The Reformed always argued that baptism was
to be given to covenant infants because, according to the
covenant, the things signified therein belonged or
pertained to them, viz. the forgiveness of sins,
regeneration, and the kingdom of heaven. F. Turretin,
Institutio Theologiae Elencticae, Pars Tertia,
Geneva, 1690, p. 465.]
That the Lord should so direct his saving love down
the lines of generations is only to be expected of a
Father who knows what it is to love a son and to suffer a
son to fall under the divine wrath and who teaches his
own children that 'everyone who loves the father loves
his child as well' (1 John 5:1). It is only to love his
people genuinely and deeply that the Father should also
love their children, whom John Flavel, with a parent's
insight, somewhere describes as 'pieces of themselves
wrapped in another skin.' Imagine the contrary: that
Christian parents brought children into the world with no
confidence at all that the saving grace which had been
pitched upon themamong the comparatively few
in all the world so favoredwould likewise be
pitched upon their children, whom they love as they love
life itself. Christian parents do not imagine themselves
to be populating hell when they bring sons and daughters
into the world! Their hope and expectation are otherwise
(Ps. 90:16). The fact that so many whose theology
provides no ground for such an expectation nevertheless
do not anguish over bearing children is sobering evidence
of the appalling lack of seriousness which characterizes
the generality of Christians today. As McCheyne put it in
one of his characteristically solemn sermons, if anything
would spoil the joy of heaven, it would be to know that
one's children were not there.[ Begin Footnote ]
Sermons of Robert Murray
M'Cheyne, Edinburgh, 1961, pp.
3031. [ End Footnote ]
Contrarily, there is no joy that surpasses the joy of a
spiritually minded parent who sees his or her children
walking in the truth. [The reference is to 2 John 4 which
may have to do with an actual mother and children or may
instead refer, under the figure of a Christian
materfamilias, to a church and its members. F.F. Bruce,
The Epistles of John, London, 1970, p.
137. [ End Footnote ] It is a true
Father and a perfect fatherly love that made and then so
often repeated the promise to be a God to his people and
to their children.[ Begin Footnote ]
William Romaine told a
correspondent of his: 'Mr. Whitfield used often to say to
me, "how highly favoured I was; that whereas, none of his
family were believers, all mine were like those blessed
people, Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus."
My father and mother, and my three sisters, share in his
love.' Works of William Romaine, vol. 8, London,
1796, p. 18.]
III. The biblical paradigm is for covenant children
to grow up in faith from infancy.
It is surely remarkable, the voluntarist and
revivalist mentality of the modern evangelical church
notwithstanding, Holy Scripture furnishes only one
unquestionable example of a covenant child, reared in a
pious home, growing up in unbelief to be converted in
adulthood, and the usefulness of that sole example to
justify a paradigm of 'covenant conversion' is severely
compromised by its peculiar place in salvation history.
The Lord's brothers did not believe in him during the
days of his ministry, but are found together with the
disciples following the resurrection (Acts 1:14). The
purpose they thus serve as witnesses to the resurrection
suggests itself as the primary explanation for their
youthful unbelief rather than that adolescent or young
adult conversion is commonly to be expected of covenant
children, much less that it should be the norm. The Bible
may offer a few other examples (e.g. Josiah, 2 Chron.
34:3) of the conversion of covenant children in
adolescence or young adulthood, but these statements
could be otherwise explained and little weight should be
placed upon them. Attempts to demonstrate that Jacob was
converted at Peniel or Bethel are sheer speculation. It
is not to be doubted that sometimes covenant children do
grow up in unbelief and are subsequently converted. It is
striking, however, that many memorable examples of this
phenomenon (e.g. Augustine, John and Charles Wesley,
Charles Spurgeon, and A.W. Pink) suggest that there was a
peculiar divine purpose in exposing such men as the Lord
would make these men to be to the experience of unbelief,
conviction, and conversion. [It is worth noting as well
that in the cases of Augustine or the Wesleys, an
unbelieving father or a very poor example of a Christian
father may well have been the providential
instrumentality of their youthful unbelief. In the cases
of Spurgeon and Pink, the conversions in young adulthood
were still not unrelated to the faithful nurture of their
parents.] For all the tacit assumption in the evangelical
world that the church's children will have a 'conversion
experience,' a conscious stepping from darkness into
light, this is surely not the biblical expectation.
Several times witness is born to faith stretching back to
infancy (Ps. 22:910, 71:56 ['These thoughts
run parallel to those of 22:9ff., though they are
differently expressed. Here the psalmist looks back to
the limits of his memory (5) and beyond (6), to be
reassured by the threefold cord of a relationship that
was lifelong, that had sufficed in other times of
frailty, and that was not of his own devising. On his
side there had been filial dependence, but God had been
already at work for him,
"Before my infant heart conceived
From whom these comforts flowed."'
Kidner, Psalms, (TOTC) vol. 1, p. 251.]; 2 Tim.
3:15; cf. 1 Kgs. 18:12), and even beyond (Luke 1:15).
Further, it is emphatically clear from Deuteronomy to
Proverbs to Ephesians that nurture, not evangelism, is
the paradigm of childrearing in the covenant home,
a nurture which presupposes a heart, however young, set
free, or soon to be set free, from the native blindness
and opposition to the truth into which the fall has cast
all mankind from conception (Ps 51:5). It can only be
thought remarkable that the contrary
paradigmadolescent unbelief overcome in an
experience of new birthnow so securely fixed
in the evangelical mind, never once appears in Scripture
in an exemplary role and almost never appears at all.
Instead, there is everywhere the assumption that the
covenanted grace will overtake covenant children at the
headwaters of life so that, in response to a faithful
parental and ecclesiastical nurture, they will both claim
the promises made to them and respond to the summons
issued to them in a way appropriate to each stage of life
according to the measure of faith. [Whether it is wise to
speak of covenant infants as presumptively regenerate, as
do Kuyper and Schenck, is a separate question. Even
Kuyper himself was careful to say that to speak thus was
not to suggest that all covenant infants were born again
in infancy, only that they were to be considered
regenerate and treated accordingly. A. Kuyper, 'Calvinism
and Confessional Revision,' Presbyterian
Quarterly, vol. V, No. 4 (Oct. 1891) pp.
502503. The problem, in my judgment, lies less in
the notion of this presumption, carefully circumscribed
as it could be, than in Kuyper's view of regeneration
which he took over from certain Reformed theologians of
the scholastic period. Voetius, for example, maintained
that regeneration was essentially the implanting of a
habitus or a seed of grace, which can for a long time
slumber in the heart without coming to expression in
actual conversion. In this sense Voetius held that the
Apostle Paul and the thief on the cross had been born
again from their earliest infancy. 'De Statu Electorum
ante Conversionem,' D. Gysberti Voetii Selectarum
Disputationum Fasciculus, Amsterdam, 1887, p. 262.
Witsius thought similarly. See van Genderen, Herman
Witsius, pp. 218219. Cf. C. Graafland, De
Zekerheid van het Geloof, Amsterdam, 1977, pp.
151152. The always judicious Bavinck preferred to
say that Reformed theologians always held that such
regeneration in infancy can occur, often does occur, and
that the church is to consider and treat her children,
according to the judgment of love, not as heathen
children but as true children of the covenant until they
prove the contrary. Gereformeerde Dogmatiek, vol.
4, Kampen, 1918, p. 116; cf. pp. 3035. Sibrandus
Lubbertus, for example, wrote in 1618 that while it
cannot be known with certainty that any particular child
has received the Holy Spirit, we may be certain that the
Holy Spirit is given to covenant infants as a class on
the grounds of the covenant and the promise of God. C.
van der Woude, Sibrandus Lubbertus: Leven en werken,
in het bijzonder naar zijn correspondentie, Kampen,
1963, p. 374. Van der Woude goes on to say that in
holding this opinion Lubbertus shows himself a good
disciple of Beza and Ursinus. On the controversy on this
point in the Dutch church, cf. Veenhof, Prediking en
Uitverkiezing, pp. 290312. Hodge wrote, 'we do
not assert their regeneration, or that they are true
members of Christ's body; we only assert that they belong
to the class of persons whom we are bound to regard and
treat as members of Christ's Church. This is the only
sense in which even adults are members of the Church, so
far as men are concerned.' 'The General Assembly,'
Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, vol. XX,
p. 351, cited in Schenck, op. cit., pp.
129130. Warfield speaks of a 'fair presumption of
inclusion in Christ's body'' built upon a divine promise.
'The Polemics of Infant Baptism,' The Works of
Benjamin B. Warfield, vol. IX, New York, 1932, p.
390. J. Murray says that 'Baptized infants are to be
received as children of God and treated accordingly.'
Christian Baptism, Philadelphia, 1972, p. 59. Any
of these constructions is greatly to be preferred to the
view of Archibald Alexander who held, as did Thornwell
subsequently, that 'The education of children should
proceed on the principle that they are in an unregenerate
state, until evidences of piety clearly appear.'
Thoughts on Religious Experience, reprinted,
Edinburgh, 1967, pp. 1113. For a period of several
years during his ministry Alexander doubted the validity
of infant baptism [See J.W. Alexander, The Life of
Archibald Alexander, D.D., reprinted, Harrisonburg,
1991, pp. 203224]. His description of what should
constitute evidence of regeneration in the young, if
applied, mutatis mutandis , to adults, would leave the
largest part of the believing church in a state of
perpetual anxiety. I do not know what Scripture text
could be cited in support of Alexander's theory. He cites
none. William Young subjected Kuyper's 'presumptive
regeneration' to severe criticism in his 'Historic
Calvinism and NeoCalvinism,' Westminster
Theological Journal, vol. XXXVI Nos. 12
(FallWinter 19731974) pp. 4864 and
156173. He does demonstrate the tenuousness of
Kuyper's claim that the Reformed theology in its
formative period typically defined the status of covenant
children specifically in terms of presumed regeneration .
He does not demonstrate, however, that there was not, in
fact, a presumptionbased on the divine
promise and the church membership of covenant
infantsupon which these children were
considered and treated as Christians. Young's appeal to
Alexander's viewpoint as typical of Reformed and
Presbyterian thought is clearly a mistake and
substantially vitiates his general criticism of what he
calls Kuyper's 'presumptivism.' My own opinion is that to
speak of a presumption of regeneration is not helpful. It
is not the way the Scripture speaks and introduces
unnecessary complications. Further, in current usage,
'presumption' may well imply to many minds an unwarranted
assumption.]
Though not impossible, it is clearly not the normal
expectation in Scripture that a covenant child should
experience a conscious conversion or endure a period in
which he or she has a sense of standing outside the
covenant community, without God and without hope in the
world. Rather, the normal experience of the children of
believers should be that of David, who trusted in the
Lord from his mother's breasts. No doubt this is in fact
the experience of many covenant children who,
nevertheless, 'have' a conversion experience in
adolescence because it is required of them by their
ecclesiastical tradition. My own observation confirms
some recent research suggesting that both the frequency
of conversion experiences and their type vary distinctly
according to church background. [M. Barker,
'Psychological Aspects of Inner Healing,' Pulpit and
People: Essays in honour of William Still on his 75th
birthday, Edinburgh, 1986, pp.
9394. [ End Footnote ] That such
'experiences' in the case of covenant children actually
represent passage from darkness to light is, in many
cases, highly doubtful, though they may well represent
certain particularly important crises of illumination or
repentance.[ Begin Footnote ]
So John Murray, Collected
Writings, vol. 2, Edinburgh, 1977, pp.
199201.]
The significance of the biblical expectation of infant
faith for both the importance and the method of parental
nurture in a covenant home cannot be overstated. The
incalculable mercy that it is to grow up in the faith
should be often acknowledged in home and in church. ['The
Duke of Buccleuch, at the unveiling of the [Sir Walter]
Scott monument at Westminster some years ago, said he had
spoken with Scott (perhaps been fondled by him), but it
was before he could remember, and yet it was one of the
great memories of his life. Baptism should not be less to
any than that.' P.T. Forsyth, Lectures on the Church
and the Sacraments, London, 1917, p. 168.]
IV. The children of the covenant are members of the
church.
This part of the biblical doctrine of covenant
succession needs less elaboration because it is better
represented in the standard works of Reformed
ecclesiology and defenses of infant baptism. [R. Baxter,
Plain Scripture Proof of Infants
ChurchMembership and Baptism, London, 1651.] By
virtue of their sacramental initiation, of the
requirement of their presence at renewals of the covenant
(Deut 29:915; Joel 2:16), of their being addressed
as among the saints and as part of the church with
corresponding obligations (Eph 1:1; 6:13), of their
holiness (1 Cor 7:14), of the kingdom of God being theirs
(Matt 18:1315), they are members of the church. All
the more, given the presumption of early faith, they meet
the requirements of church membership. Another lovely and
highly important way of making this point in Scripture is
the Lord's practice of speaking of covenant children as
his children (Ezek 16:2021; Mal 2:15; cf. Isa
29:23). It is again extraordinary how thoroughly rooted
in evangelical culture has become the practice of
covenant children 'joining the church' when Scripture
provides neither instruction or illustration supportive
of the practice but rather, in every way, regards such
children as already part of the community of the saints
from the beginning of their lives. Indeed, the
recognition that covenant children are church members
from their infancy furnishes the simplest resolution of
certain practical objections commonly raised against the
doctrine of covenant succession. If, for example, it be
objected that it cannot be known that a very little child
is or will eventually become a faithful follower of
Christ, it needs only be pointed out that, so far as
human judgment is concerned, that uncertainty applies
equally to those who enter the church from the world by
profession of faith. [So Warfield, 'Polemics of Infant
Baptism,' p. 390; C. Hodge, The Church and its
Polity, p. 216.] Just as those who enter the church
from the world, covenant children are required, as all
church members, to grow up in the grace and knowledge of
God and to live worthy of the calling they have received.
As with older church members, others are appointed to
help them do so. [Thornwell's opinion, elaborated above,
that covenant children were but quasi members of the
church with an entirely different status from that of
professors, is so far removed from the statements of Holy
Scripture itself and so alien to the Bible's entire
approach to the question, that it serves well as both a
warning of the power of even an evangelical spiritual
culture to deafen the church to the Bible's actual words
and as a reminder that, even among our Reformed
authorities, from time to time it is to be observed that
bonus dormitat Homerus! On the other hand, it cannot be
denied that the common practice in Reformed churches of
allowing persons, baptized in infancy and thus members of
the church, who grow up to spiritual indifference or
active rebellion and who, accordingly, never 'join the
church,' to be treated as if they were never members of
the church is practically Thornwell's view, however
unwittingly. It has not been so always and everywhere.
John a Lasco's method with baptized children who, once
adults, did not seek the Lord's Table was to warn them
and then to expel them from the church. A.G. Honig,
Alexander Comrie, reprinted, Leiden, 1991,
Stelling XIII.]
The immensely important consequence of this infant
membership is that the duty of parents and the church
becomes, thereby, to train their children to believe,
feel, and live as becomes the children of God and members
of his household, which they are! Especially parents, who
are the masters of their children's thoughts in the
formative years, are responsible to ensure that the
children of the covenant grow up fully aware and
appreciative of the promises which have been made to them
by name and the summons which was issued to them at the
headwaters of their lives. Surely one of the most dismal
evidences of the debasement of this doctrine in
Presbyterian churches is in the general insensibility of
covenant children themselves to their status, their
breathtaking privileges, and their sacred obligations.
['But O how we neglect that ordinance! treating our
children in the Church, just as if they were out of it.
Ought we not daily to say (in its spirit) to our
children, "You are Christian children, you are Christ's,
you ought to think and feel and act as such!" And, on
this plan carried out, might we not expect more early
fruit of the grace than by keeping them always looking
forward to a point of time at which they shall have new
hearts and join the church? I am distressed with
longharbored misgivings on this point.' J.W.
Alexander, 'Forty Years' Familiar Letters," II, p. 25,
cited in Schenck, p. 81.]
V. Parents are charged to nurture their children in
Christian faith and love.
The spiritual culture of their children, their
instruction in the works and will of God, their
preparation for a life of faith is made the direct
responsibility of the church's parents according to a
great many texts (Gen. 18:19; Exod. 10:12,
12:2427, 13:8, 1416, 31:1213; Deut.
4:9, 6:49; Ps. 44:1, 78:18; Isa. 38:19; 2
Tim. 3:1415). The entirety of Proverbs is
illustration both of the manner and substance of that
covenantal nurture (the covenantal name of God is used
throughout the book). According to Scripture the covenant
home is to be both a school of faith and a temple in
which the acknowledgment of God and his worship confirm
and adorn the instruction (cf. Ps. 118:15; 2 Sam. 6:20).
The larger community of faith and especially the ministry
also bear responsibility for this nurture of mind and
heart (Hos. 4:6; Mic. 2:9; Jer. 2:89; 2 Chron.
24:2, 26:5; cf. Zech. 11:16).
VI. Faithful nurture of covenant children is the
divine instrumentality of their awakening to spiritual
life.
The Scripture repeatedly and emphatically connects the
fact and the quality of the nurture of covenant children
with the spiritual outcome of their lives. It draws this
connection both positively and negatively.
First, over and again the Scripture declares that the
nurture of covenant children in knowledge, faith, love,
and obedience will issue in a life of covenantal
faithfulness. Faithful parenting will result, by
covenanted grace, in believing children. Immediately upon
the definitive revelation of the promise of covenant
succession in Gen. 17:7, covenantal nurture is identified
as the instrumentality of its fulfillment (18:19 cf.
22:1618, 26:35; Deut. 28:14). The
straightforward connection established between the
meeting of this condition and the fulfillment of this
promise must neither be ignored nor minimized. That the
faith and salvation of the covenant's children is
suspended on the faithfulness of their nurture is a
biblical commonplace. The point is made repeatedly and
emphatically. Psalm 78:18 may be regarded as a
locus classicus (cf. Gen. 18:19; Deut. 4:40, 5:29; Ps.
102:28, 103:1718, 112:12; Isa.
59:2021). The fact of the connection between
faithful nurture and covenantal faithfulness in the life
of the church's children is one of the grand themes of
Proverbs (e.g. 2:17:27, 14:26, 19:18, 22:6, 15,
23:14) and is unquestionably the presupposition of these
many texts, (some of which are listed under V supra)
which urge upon parents the duty of instructing their
children in the faith and leading them in the ways of
God! We find Paul in Eph. 6:14 playing the role of
the godly father to the church's children and in the same
breath admonishing parents so to raise their children as
to bring their spiritual blessing to pass.
The same connection between parents' faithfulness and
their children's salvation is also made negatively. This
is a specific application of the general laws,
comprehensively taught and illustrated in Scripture, that
children will suffer for the sins of their parents (Ex.
20:5; Jer. 2:9; 32:18; 36:31; Lam 2:11; Hos. 4:6; Luke
11:50) and will imitate their parents in wrongdoing (1
Kgs. 22:52; 2 Kgs. 17:41; Ezek. 20:24,27). Responsibility
for the betrayal of the covenant on the part of the
priests Hophni and Phinehas is laid at the feet of their
father, Eli (1 Sam. 2:29, 3:13; note 'young men' in
2:17). It is surely intended to be instructive that the
account of Amnon and Tamar (2 Sam. 13) immediately
follows upon the account of David's adultery. David was
no Job (1:115). It is no slander to acknowledge
that he was an inattentive and ineffective father who by
his instruction, to the extent he gave it, showed his
children the way to heaven, but by his example too often
led them by the hand to hell. The sorry history of his
indulgence of Absalom demonstrates his parental
incompetence, the rebellion of his son Adonijah is
directly attributed to his parental failings (1 Kings.
1:6), and Solomon's spiritual collapse in his maturity is
a striking imitation of his father's. It is most
instructive how the chronicler pays attention to the
influence of parentage for good or ill on the kings of
Judah. All the righteous kings have Hebrew mothers, so
far as can be determined, and the fact that these women
are identified as they are strongly suggests that they
were to some significant degree responsible for the
faithfulness of their sons. Contrarily, in two cases
(12:1314, 22:3), the identity of the king's mother
is offered as an explanation for his betrayal of the
covenant it was his duty to obey and protect. A
particularly noteworthy and solemnizing instance of a
godly parent nevertheless horribly failing his children
is that of Hezekiah, perhaps Judah's best king, whose
cruelly selfcentered response to the announcement
of impending judgment upon the nation for his own sin
must have had a profound effect upon his young son,
Manasseh, who was soon to succeed him. [It is worth
pondering the fact that Manasseh was at a most
impressionable age when Hezekiah so terribly betrayed his
faith, but Josiah was at a similarly impressionable
period during Manasseh's late repentance. Manasseh was
Josiah's grandfather, but the facts that Josiah's father,
Amon, became king when he was only twentytwo years
of age and reigned for only two years suggest that the
imposing grandfather, with his immensely interesting and
impressive personal history as well as his furious
repentance, may well have made the far greater impression
on the boy growing up at court than his own father's weak
and inconsequential life.]
Further, there is the very important evidence of Titus
1:6 where Paul lays down the requirement that to qualify
for consideration for the eldership a man must have
believing children. [Paul uses here the adjective rather
than the participle, but the authorities agree that the
sense is 'believing' in the sense of 'believing in
Christ' or 'being a Christian.' BAG, p. 671.] Upon this
rock must finally shatter every attempt to argue that
parents are not directly accountable for the spiritual
issue of their childrens' lives. A man with unbelieving
children is a man with a defect which disqualifies him
from the leadership of the church.
It is to be noted, finally, that nowhere does the
Scripture suggest the contrary, that blameless parental
nurture might still result in one's children growing up
to a life of unbelief. [It is not enough to imply, as is
often done, that taking with full seriousness the
suspension of the fulfillment of the promise to the
children upon the faithfulness of the parents somehow
undermines the sovereignty of grace. Bruce Ray writes:
'Neither reading the Bible nor praying will bring a man
to salvation unless God is pleased to do a mighty work of
grace within his heart. So it is with our children. We
can administer the rod under God's authority with all
firmness, and with all persevering consistency in a
context of love, and it will come to nothing unless God
works a work of grace in their hearts. ...We can never
assume that if we properly raise our children they will
automatically be Christians. There are too many examples
in the Scriptures of godly parents who had wicked
offspring.' Withhold not Correction, p. 67. But
that is a misstatement of the case in more ways than in
his speaking of covenant children 'automatically'
becoming Christians, an idea it would be very difficult
to demonstrate has ever been held by any Christian
writer, much less Reformed one. The question is not
whether a parent is godly, but whether he or she was
faithful in the matter of parenthood. Even the most godly
of men and women fall short in many ways. And where does
the Scripture ever suggest that a blameless nurture could
end in a son or daughter's unbelief? The texts which Ray
cites as teaching the responsibility of parents seem
rather explicitly to exclude that possibility. It is
highly significant that not once in his entire book
devoted to the spiritual nurture and discipline of
Christians' children, does Ray ever appeal to the promise
of God to be our children's God. But to put parental
obligations ahead of or to consider them in isolation
from a divine promise is to place works before faith.
That promise may indeed be suspended upon conditions, as
are all the promises of the gospel, conditions which
divine grace will ensure are fulfilled in the case of the
elect, but there remains the promise of God. It is a
false disjunction to pit that promise against the
sovereignty of grace. It is to doubt God's Word to
believe that His promise will not be kept even if the
required conditions are met. Grace does not abolish
conditions, it fulfils them. The appeal to Jacob and Esau
does not serve the purpose. It is not at all clear that
the two sons were similarly nurtured in the faith or that
either one was given a godly upbringing. God's grace may
well cover many parental sins. His promise only
constrains him to crown his own gift when, by his grace,
parents raise their children faithfully in the love and
fear of God. Why in the same family one believes and
another does not can often be accounted for by the
different nurture or example each received. Joseph did
not receive the same upbringing as his brothers. There
are many factors, however, which are known and can be
weighed only by God. On the 'divinely constituted
relation between the piety of parents and that of their
children' and on the conditionality of the divine promise
to be the God of believers' children, cf. Hodge,
'Bushnell on Christian Nurture,' pp. 504507 and
Atwater, 'The Children of the Church and Sealing
Ordinances,' pp. 1617. The whole point was put in a
more homely way by the mother of Wilhelmus a Brakel, the
celebrated figure of the Dutch Nadere Reformatie. Brakel
himself often acknowledged that he could not recollect a
time in his life when he was an unbeliever, having
trusted in the Lord from his mother's breasts. His
biographer notes that the principle of grace, which had
been so early implanted in his heart by the Spirit of
God, was nurtured by the faithful instruction,
discipline, and godly example of his parents, especially
their prayers. His mother prayed so incessantly that her
son would walk with God that, he remembers her frequently
saying to him, 'O, what you will have to answer for, if
you do not fear God!' F.J. Los, Wlihelmus A
Brakel, reprinted, Leiden, 1991, pp. 2526.]
That faithful nurture should be a real condition of
the fulfillment of the promise of covenant succession is,
after all, only to be expected. It is exactly parallel to
other such conditions and to the stress placed on other
instrumentalities of saving grace. Just as those who are
far off will not be brought near unless someone is sent
to preach to them, just as the church will not remain
faithful to God unless her ministry remains faithful, so
the church's children will not awaken to a life of living
faith without covenantal nurture. Such are the appointed
means of grace which divine sovereignty, with its secret
purposes, provides for all who are being saved. [It is
the faithful acknowledgement of the seriousness with
which the Lord views this parental nurture as a condition
of the fulfillment of his promise that is the true
protection against a nominalism which denatures the
doctrine of covenant succession and bases upon it a false
presumption of the eternal security of the church's
children. Holding fast to the clear connection drawn in
Scripture between the fulfillment of God's promise and
the divinely appointed instrumentality of its fulfillment
is a much more effective deterrent to a careless
presumption than having accurately stated the ground of
infant baptism. Both Kuyper and his critics lay the
stress on the latter rather than the former. Cf. Veenhof,
Prediking en Uitverkiezing, pp. 290305;
Young, 'Calvinism and NeoCalvinism.' It is
interesting that it is precisely this Biblical emphasis
upon the divinely appointed instrumentality of the
promise's fulfillment which is missing both in the
Reformed Baptist treatment of Bruce Ray and the arguably
'hyperCalvinistic' treatment of Herman Hoeksema.
Believers and their Seed, Grand Rapids, 1971. In
both works the concern is to protect the absolute
sovereignty of grace. It seems to me that in both works
there is a failure to do justice to the covenantal
character of that divine grace and a similar propensity
to argue from God's secrets, instead of resting content
with the actual statements of the Bible. A grateful and
faithful undertaking of the appointed means in reliance
upon the required and promised grace is what is asked for
in Scripture. H. Bavinck, Paedagogische
Beginselen, Kampen, 1904, pp. 9092.]
I am entirely aware of the poignant pastoral dilemma
posed by the necessity of preaching the accountability of
parents for the salvation of their offspring. In almost
any congregation there are parents grieving over the
unbelief of their children. No faithful pastor wishes to
rub salt in an open wound. Further, the calculation of
any parent's accountability is no simple matter and
distinctions, even when carefully noted, are too easily
ignored to the further dismay and confusion of everyone.
Scripture itself clearly introduces mitigating factors
and points, by analogy, to the possibility of others. How
old were the children when the parents became believers?
It would seem that virtually all accountability for a
failure of nurture could, in some cases, be thus
expunged. Were both parents Christians (note Paul's
indefiniteness in 1 Cor. 7:1416)? Was the
unbelieving parent passive or hostile? How well served
were the parents by the instruction of their church (Isa.
3:14, Jer. 2:89, 10:21; Lam. 4:13)? In many cases
it would seem that a church and its ministry would be
directly responsible for the unbelief of children whose
proper nurture was undermined by the teaching of false
views of the relation between God, the gospel, and the
church's children. What was the general condition of the
church at the time (Judges 2:10, 19, 3:6)? ['But, alas,
we may say of most men's religion what learned Rivet
speaks concerning the errors of the fathers, "They were
not so much their own errors, as the errors of the times
wherein they lived." 'To the Christian Reader, especially
Heads of Families' [The preface to the first edition of
the Westminster Confession of Faith], reprinted,
Edinburgh, 1967, p.4.] Accountability for a covenant
child's betrayal of the gospel lies chiefly with him or
her (Ezek. 18:14). The remainder of that
accountability parents bear with church and
ministerbut always according to such
aforementioned principles of equity introduced in
Scripture. Further, God's dealings are an impenetrable
mystery and latitude must be given to God's freedom to be
merciful in varying degrees (Lk. 7:4150; Matt.
20:116). The Lord has a right to cover more
parental sins in one case than in another and is free to
require that one parent see the fruit of his parental
sins while hiding it from another. Moreover, no doubt in
regard to parental nurture, as everything else in the
Christian life, 'to whom much is given, much is
required.'
All of this notwithstanding, it needs finally to be
faced squarely that in our day Christian people suffer
from a terribly diminished estimation of sin. The
generality of Christians today genuinely and feelingly
acknowledge only relatively innocuous transgressions. The
defensiveness of most Christians, even when accused of
relatively minor and common misdeeds, is only to be
expected of people who have come to measure their guilt
chiefly in terms of those sins which are generally
tolerated in the church as common frailties. There is an
eerie disjunction between the contemporary Christian's
measurement of his or her own sin and the same
Christian's doctrines of an infinitely costly atonement
and an everlasting hell. Few Christians today are
prepared to acknowledge that they have a direct
responsibility for someone else's eternal damnation. Even
among ministers there are few who seem actually to be
bearing the terrible weight of their accountability,
notwithstanding the Scripture's plainspeaking
(Ezek. 3:1719; Acts 20:2627; Heb. 13:17). But
Christians must be made to see that the sins which sent
our Redeemer to the cross are not peccadilloes, but
titanic things, high crimes, and among those terrible
evils which are found in the life of even some of the
most godly men and women, such as David himself, are
those sins of parental unfaithfulness which contribute to
the spiritual death of their children. Consequently, no
Christian, thinking rightly, should pray any less
solemnly and urgently than this about his or her
parenthood.
Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, give us such a
seed! Give
us a seed right with Thee! Smite us and our house with
ever
lasting barrenness rather than that our seed should not
be right
with Thee. O God, give us our children. Give us our
children.
A second time, and by a far better birth, give us our
children to be
beside us in Thy holy covenant. For it had been better we
had
never been born; it had been better we had never been
betrothed;
it had been better we had sat all our days solitary
unless our
children are to be right with Thee. ...But thou, O God,
art Thyself
a Father, and thu