» Site Navigation | | | » Online Users: 84 | | 27 members and 57 guests | | asc, biggandyy, Blue Tick, ChristianTrader, Dwimble, greenbaggins, jd.morrison, JTDyck, jwithnell, MrMerlin777, mvdm, PuritanBouncer, refbaptdude, Romans922, TaylorOtwell, TimV, toddpedlar, victorbravo | | Most users ever online was 856, 07-06-2007 at 12:19 AM. | |  | 
05-19-2006, 08:47 AM
| | Puritanboard Freshman | | Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 175
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | | Clarkians and Vantillians
I have read much on the board with the disagreements between the Clarkians and VanTillians. I was wondering if there is any common ground philosophically or epistemologically. Hopefully I am not opening a can of | 
05-19-2006, 08:52 AM
|  | Puritanboard Librarian | | Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Warrenton, VA, USA
Posts: 22,323
Thanks: 2,012
Thanked 2,663 Times in 1,589 Posts
| |
This thread might be helpful.
__________________
Andrew Myers
Husband of Jessica, Father of Jackson, Katie and Samuel
Member, Presbyterian Reformed Church of Northern Virginia
Warrenton, VA USA
Editor, The Matthew Poole Project
"Let your Morning Thoughts, and your last Evening Thoughts, be what shall become of you to all Eternity." -- Matthew Poole
| 
05-19-2006, 09:12 AM
|  | The Odd Mod(erator) | | Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Janesville, WI
Posts: 5,862
Thanks: 226
Thanked 1,292 Times in 538 Posts
| | |
They both put their shirts on one leg at a time and presuppositionalism is the first page of their systematic.
| 
05-19-2006, 09:14 AM
| | Puritanboard Freshman | | Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 175
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | Quote: Originally posted by BobVigneault
They both put their shirts on one leg at a time and presuppositionalism is the first page of their systematic.
| 
That starts me off!!! | 
05-19-2006, 11:45 AM
|  | Puritanboard Junior | | Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: State of Franklin
Posts: 1,876
Thanks: 110
Thanked 67 Times in 47 Posts
| | |
I think they were in much agreement in general - but differed on some details. Maybe they were 95% in agreement. It surprises me how vigorously Van Til fought against some of Clark's positions, since those points were almost always the weakest points in his philosophy. Instead of building on the common ground, he seemed to fight for the flawed details in his presuppositionalism.
__________________
R. Anthony Coletti
Midway Presbyterian Church (PCA)
Jonesborough, TN
[i]et venite et arguite me dicit Dominus[/i]
| 
05-19-2006, 12:08 PM
|  | The Odd Mod(erator) | | Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Janesville, WI
Posts: 5,862
Thanks: 226
Thanked 1,292 Times in 538 Posts
| |
Here's an illuminating article by one of our OPC historians, John Muether. http://www.opc.org/new_horizons/NH04/10a.html | 
05-19-2006, 01:32 PM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Wichita, Kansas
Posts: 3,775
Thanks: 69
Thanked 51 Times in 40 Posts
| | From the article: Quote: |
The complaint against Clark originated in the Presbytery of Philadelphia over irregularities in the manner in which Clark was ordained (and Van Til was one of several complainants). When seen in light of these other debates in the early history of the church, this controversy was part of a larger battle over the church's Reformed identity. Clark was a pawn in the agenda of a faction of the church that was discontent with its Reformed identity. Ultimately, what was at stake was the question of whether the church's ecclesiology would be evangelical or Reformed. In the end, Clark's ordination was affirmed (and the complaint denied). But when the church rejected the agenda of a broader evangelicalism, Clark and his supporters left the church.
| I would like to know if there is anything to support this statement. As far as I know, Clark was not headed toward a "broader evangelicalism", but contended for the reformed faith as found in the Westminster Standards.
__________________
Jeff Bartel
Mechanical Engineer
Member - Trinity Reformed Church - RPCNA
"To believe in the power of man in the work of regeneration is the great heresy of Rome, and from that error has come the ruin of the Church. Conversion proceeds from the grace of God alone, and the system which ascribes it partly to man and partly to God is worse than Pelagianism" (The Reformation in England (London, 1962), Vol. 1, p. 98) Click to get: Board Rules -- Signature Requirements -- Suggestions? | 
05-19-2006, 02:25 PM
|  | Puritanboard Junior | | Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: State of Franklin
Posts: 1,876
Thanks: 110
Thanked 67 Times in 47 Posts
| | Quote: Originally posted by Jeff_Bartel From the article: Quote: |
The complaint against Clark originated in the Presbytery of Philadelphia over irregularities in the manner in which Clark was ordained (and Van Til was one of several complainants). When seen in light of these other debates in the early history of the church, this controversy was part of a larger battle over the church's Reformed identity. Clark was a pawn in the agenda of a faction of the church that was discontent with its Reformed identity. Ultimately, what was at stake was the question of whether the church's ecclesiology would be evangelical or Reformed. In the end, Clark's ordination was affirmed (and the complaint denied). But when the church rejected the agenda of a broader evangelicalism, Clark and his supporters left the church.
| I would like to know if there is anything to support this statement. As far as I know, Clark was not headed toward a "broader evangelicalism", but contended for the reformed faith as found in the Westminster Standards.
| It seems to be a strange spin on the Clark/Van Til Controversy. You'd think if the Clark had an evangelism agenda, it would have been clearer in his writings.
"Kuyper stressed that there is a fundamental antagonism between believers and unbelievers in the world, and Van Til placed this antithesis at the forefront of his apologetic method."
I think this is very interesting regarding Van Til's apologetics. And it's one of those weaker points of his system that, had he been willing to concede, or even admit some uncertainty about, might have gone a long way in removing the divide with Clark. It's a shame that he made it the "forefront of his apologetic" method. Sure, there is some antagonism, but to make it into a wall of separation seems unwarranted.
[Edited on 5-19-2006 by Civbert]
__________________
R. Anthony Coletti
Midway Presbyterian Church (PCA)
Jonesborough, TN
[i]et venite et arguite me dicit Dominus[/i]
| 
05-19-2006, 08:16 PM
|  | Administrator | | Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Northern Virgnia
Posts: 12,347
Thanks: 1,063
Thanked 2,467 Times in 1,173 Posts
| | |
This is supposed to be a thread about common ground...
| 
05-20-2006, 10:10 AM
|  | Puritanboard Sophomore | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 682
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | Here is Dr. Robbins' response to Muether's "illuminating" historic revisionism: http://www.trinityfoundation.org/journal.php?id=204
I can assure you the divisions will only grow deeper thanks to the duplicity of men like Muether.
__________________
Sean Gerety
Member
Calvary Presbyterian, PCA
Norfolk, VA I don't really like disconcerting people. Although often when I try to be normal I disconcert anyway." Robert Wyatt | 
05-20-2006, 10:33 AM
|  | Administrator | | Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Northern Virgnia
Posts: 12,347
Thanks: 1,063
Thanked 2,467 Times in 1,173 Posts
| | Quote: Originally posted by Founded on the Rock
I have read much on the board with the disagreements between the Clarkians and VanTillians. I was wondering if there is any common ground philosophically or epistemologically... | Well I can tell you that one thing they don't have in common is that Clarkians have a hard time, philosophically, understanding what a discussion of "common ground" entails.
| 
05-20-2006, 10:42 AM
|  | Puritanboard Sophomore | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 682
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | Quote: Originally posted by Civbert
I think they were in much agreement in general - but differed on some details. Maybe they were 95% in agreement. It surprises me how vigorously Van Til fought against some of Clark's positions, since those points were almost always the weakest points in his philosophy. Instead of building on the common ground, he seemed to fight for the flawed details in his presuppositionalism.
| I couldn't disagree more and I'm generally in agreement with most of what Anthony writes. I don't agree that VT fought against the "weakest" points in Clar's philosophy, but his attack was at the heart. Clark and Van Til's view of epistemology and Scripture are mutually exclusive. Their controversy, which is ongoing, should have made that clear. Van Til's view of biblical paradox and his analogous view of Scripture ends in complete skepticism and raise confusion and ignorance to the height of Christian piety.
Van Tilianism encourages laziness in Bible study, commends ignorance, and elevates clerics and academics, especially those of the Vantilian stripe, into a new priestly class who alone can peer into the Biblical stew of apparent contradictions, antinomies, tensions, analogies, and insoluble paradoxes and demand assent to their contradictory view of truth on the basis of nothing more than their own authority.
If you want a revealing picture of the maneuvering and authoritarian tactics of men schooled in Van Tils apologetics -- the real fruit of Van Tilianism as practiced by his heirs - read Paul Elliots book; Christianity and Neo-Liberalism, particularly his account of the John Kinnaird case. Elliot's section on Frame and Poythress is more evidence of the rotten fruit of Van Tilianism.
__________________
Sean Gerety
Member
Calvary Presbyterian, PCA
Norfolk, VA I don't really like disconcerting people. Although often when I try to be normal I disconcert anyway." Robert Wyatt | 
05-20-2006, 10:46 AM
|  | Administrator | | Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Northern Virgnia
Posts: 12,347
Thanks: 1,063
Thanked 2,467 Times in 1,173 Posts
| | |
MODS - Save the Clarkians from their obsessive naval-gazing. This thread is supposed to be about common ground...
| 
05-20-2006, 11:35 AM
|  | Puritanboard Sophomore | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 682
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | Quote: Originally posted by SemperFideles
MODS - Save the Clarkians from their obsessive naval-gazing. This thread is supposed to be about common ground...
| Rich, you really need to pay closer attention. The opening question - what this thread is about - was; if there is any common ground philosophically or epistemologically?
The answer is no. The only common ground there has been, up until recently, was the gospel and given the FV controversy there doesn't seem to be much common ground there either.
__________________
Sean Gerety
Member
Calvary Presbyterian, PCA
Norfolk, VA I don't really like disconcerting people. Although often when I try to be normal I disconcert anyway." Robert Wyatt | 
05-20-2006, 11:52 AM
|  | Puritanboard Sophomore | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 682
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | Quote: Originally posted by paul manata
Also, it is very unhelpful to use some problematic positions of some Van Tillians to claim that Van Til's system is to blame. Maybe, Van Til's system, taken too far, can lead to problems. Just like Clark's, taken to far, can lead to problems. Almost every hero of the faith has people that have taken their system too far (hyper-calvinists et al).
| Lets see, what problems can you cite if one holds that the Scripture alone have a monopoly on truth and knowledge? Seems to me Clarks view finds its epistemic parallel in Pauls (not Mantas) admonition to Timothy; "All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works."
OTOH, Van Tils system reduces Scripture to analogy and the propositions of Scripture to paradox (not to mention denying that all truth is, by definition and necessity, propositional) and leaves men impotent to confront the contradictory teachings of the Federal Visionists as should be evident by recent links on these boards by John Frame defending Norm Shepherd " even though he admit that Shepherd DENIES the imputation of the active righteousness of Christ by belief alone!
Seems to me there is a real choice that some evidently dont want to make " even though the writing has on the wall for a very long time. Quote: |
Lastly, the problem is that when you call Van Tillians "lazy" and "irrational" while the public has access to their works (especially Bahnsen's), this just seems like sore-looser speak to people. It actually *helps,* not hinders, our position.
| You need to read more carefully Paul, while I agree that Van Tilians are irrational and attack anyone who wont play their game as "rationalists," I never said they were lazy. What I said was; "Van Tilianism encourages laziness in Bible study, commends ignorance, and elevates clerics and academics, especially those of the Vantilian stripe, into a new priestly class . . . ."
__________________
Sean Gerety
Member
Calvary Presbyterian, PCA
Norfolk, VA I don't really like disconcerting people. Although often when I try to be normal I disconcert anyway." Robert Wyatt | 
05-20-2006, 11:59 AM
|  | Puritanboard Professor | | Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 5,372
Thanks: 861
Thanked 1,073 Times in 587 Posts
| | |
Just a note here:
In the lives of some of these men and how they go about dealing with other brothers and defending their positions, I am not sure whether some of our "Christian Heroes" are very heroic at all. I am not naming names, but making a general observation....
It would appear that to truly know grace would be to display grace in all the dealings of life.
Many of the men we rally around are known for their "no holds barred" approach to dealing with dissenters (i.e. other Christian brothers with whom they disagree on mostly minor points). I am not sure that this is always an admirable quality when dealing with adiaphora.
__________________
Pergamum
"If a commission by an earthly king is considered a honor, how can a commission by a Heavenly King be considered a sacrifice?"
-- David Livingstone
| 
05-20-2006, 01:25 PM
|  | Puritanboard Professor | | Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: Clinton, MS
Posts: 5,196
Thanks: 134
Thanked 232 Times in 126 Posts
| |
Brethren,
The thread is about COMMON GROUND. If you can't post on that topic then don't post.
__________________
Patrick
OPC
MDiv, RTS Jackson. "He does well, that discourses of Christ; but he does infinitely better, that by experimental knowledge, feeds and lives on Christ." Thomas Brooks. | 
05-20-2006, 02:33 PM
|  | Puritanboard Junior | | Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Sandy, OR
Posts: 1,222
Thanks: 202
Thanked 263 Times in 150 Posts
| | |
Paul,
Whether or not you believe your position is justified over and against Sean's your response to him is a shame on the Christian faith. I'd ask you to remove your taunting and make amends with your brother if there is not a moderator who otherwise will do so.
Adam
__________________
Adam J. Myer
Now waiting on the November accessions board, because I'm still waiting on the West Coast recruiting staff!
Evergreen PCA
Salem, Oregon
| 
05-20-2006, 03:41 PM
| | Puritanboard Freshman | | Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 175
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | |
Maybe I need to read the posts again but basically, Vantillians define Clark as: Clark=Rationalsim. On the other hand, Clarkians define Van Til: Van Til=Fideism.
It has been said there is much in common but one of two things is happening. Either, there is not much common ground and that statement is invalid. Or, it is difficult to talk about neutral ground because advocates of either view can't stand to be in agreement long enough.
Is it true that 95% of the time (as Mr. Coletti said) Vantillians and Clarkians agree? {95%= a considerable amount of similarities}
| 
05-20-2006, 11:57 PM
|  | Puritanboard Sophomore | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 682
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| | Quote: |
So, I was talking about the laziness you were. What did you think I meant that Bahnsen encourages laziness in gardening, or something?
| Fair enough. You dont need to read more carefully. You need to frame your responses more carefully. You said I called Van Tilians "lazy" and thats not what I said. OTOH, Van Tilianism does indeed inculcate laziness in bible study since you accept as a matter of principle the idea that the Scriptures contain insoluble contradictions which you call "paradoxes" and which are impervious to harmonization. Consequently, there is no need to recheck your assumptions - or the assumptions of a Van Til, a Bahnsen, a Frame or even a John Murray (after all, see Murray on the so-called "well meant offer" if you want to see a contradiction embraced). You have been told on good authority that a particular biblical problem defies harmonization and you have made it clear (while lifting an argument from David Byron) that the Scriptures themselves are insufficient because even God Himself did not reveal the necessary information needed to resolve any number of these biblical "paradoxes." Therefore, you must bow your head in pious submission to your elders who have told you there is no solution to any number of particularly sticky biblical problems. You have been told to embrace " and even embrace with passion " these apparent contradictions which defy harmonization at the bar of human reason.
Consequently, who needs bible study when you have VT, Frame, Bahnsen, Poythress, Shepherd, Wilson and the rest to tell you what to believe? You have been told that the Scriptures do not cohere, that ALL Scripture is apparently contradictory, and that the use of logic when applied to Scripture will eventually, per Van Tilian Doug Jones, "force us to deny other Biblical teachings." Quote:
"All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works."
Does not prove that "the only things that can be known are Scriptural propositions or propositions that can be deduced from Scripture."
|
Well, I think it is implied and necessarily so. The passage teaches us that Scripture, plus nothing, is all that is needed so that the man of God may be "prefect" - fully equipt, lacking nothing - unto *all* - and not just some - good works. Now isnt this ironic, how often have I (and Im sure many others here have as well) cited this very passage when debating Roman Catholics in defense of sola Scriptura. Now we have a Van Tilian arguing that Scripture alone is not taught or implied in 2 Tim 3:16,17. So, what passage would you cite Paul when confronting an enemy of the Reformation who is attacking the principle of sola Scriptura? Or do you join him in his attack and affirm other sources of knowledge?
What then is another source by which we may come to a knowledge of the truth? Certainly this additional source (or sources) of knowledge will provide a basis for even more good works. Would that be the Van Tilian Magisterium you eluded to? Or is it something else? If something else, would you care to share what that might be? More importantly, how you know? Does this source of truth come with a method by which we can differentiate truth from error? Or, is this another situation like the one where were told that the "apparent contradictions" of Scripture arent real, yet no method is provided by which we can tell the one from the other? Is this another case where we are commanded to just have faith that there are other sources or methods by which the truth might be known but you just wont tell us? Quote: |
Furthermore, you can't know that the only thing that can be known is Scriptural propositions or those deduced from Scriptural propositions.
| I think you can know the very thing you deny and Scripture asserts as much according to 2 Tim already cited and other verses including Isa 8:20; "To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them." Further, the Confession states that the "whole counsel of God, concerning all things necessary for his own glory, man's salvation, faith, and life, is either expressly set down in scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelations of the Spirit, or traditions of men . . . ." Interestingly, the Confession cites 2 Tim already mentioned along with Gal. 1:8-9 and 2 Thes. 2:2. Yet, if truth can be known apart from Scripture and its necessary inferences, and if truth is properly defined as Calvin defined it as whatever God thinks, then why does the Confession assert that nothing can be added to Scripture at any time? Given what youve asserted I have to think this is rather presumptuous dont you think? Certainly, there cannot be any disharmony between truth and truth wherever it may be found. I think a fair inference from your remarks is that the Confession has erred too on this point. Quote:
Lastly, you can't *know* that Van Til taught any of the stuff you accuse him of teaching. If you don't mknow it, then it's your unjustified opinion.
So, how 'bout 'dem apples?
And, you shouldn't be debating men like you are. Maybe you're a woman, and thus should show some respect. How do you know you're a man? Maybe you're a woman, Sean. Is "Sean Gerety is a man" deducible from Scripture? Nope, 'fraid not. Actually, whenever someone gets ordained, we're ordaining people on unjustified opinions. Maybe 99% of American pulpets are pastored by women. How would you know otherwise?
| Dem apples say you just assert the very things which you need to prove. Prove youre a man. Show me the proof? From where will you deduce it? Or, is this an induction of yours? How do you arrive at this conclusion? You say its not deducible from Scripture and I quite agree. So is it deducible from one of these other yet unnamed sources of truth you only allude to? If so, lets see your argument. Also, dont hedge and dont assert self-evidence or another series of petitio principii pretending to be a valid argument. Just asserting something doesnt make it true even if you think so. Clark was too good a logician to just be content with begging the question. The only thing you seem to be saying is that Scripture doesnt provide as much knowledge as you like, therefore Clarks biblical epistemology is not adequate, or, more accurately, false. However, it should be obvious to all that this conclusion doesnt follow. Clark wrote in his Intro to Christian Philosophy: Quote: |
What account shall be given of everyday "knowledge" that common sense thinks it silly to doubt? Dont I know when I am hungry? . . . Indeed, how can I know what the Bible says without reading its pages with my own eyes? . . . But all such criticisms miss the point. The status of common opinion is not fixed until a theory has been accepted. One may admit that a number of propositions commonly believed are true; but no one can deny that many such are false. The problem is to elaborate a method by which the two classes can be distinguished. Plato too granted a place to opinion as distinct from knowledge; he even admitted that in some circumstances opinion was as useful as knowledge with a capital K . . . It is incorrect therefore to complain that the axiom of revelation deprives us of knowledge otherwise obtainable. There is no knowledge otherwise obtainable. [90-91]
| Knowledge is contingent upon the self-revelation of the Lord God of Truth. Gods self-revelation is found in the propositions of Scripture alone. FWIW Paul, I think youre picking the wrong fight.
__________________
Sean Gerety
Member
Calvary Presbyterian, PCA
Norfolk, VA I don't really like disconcerting people. Although often when I try to be normal I disconcert anyway." Robert Wyatt | 
05-21-2006, 09:15 AM
|  | Puritanboard Professor | | Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: Clinton, MS
Posts: 5,196
Thanks: 134
Thanked 232 Times in 126 Posts
| |
Sean, if you can't post on the right topic then don't post. If you wish to squabble more with Paul then start another thread or contact Paul via U2U.
I'm just going to start deleting and editting posts if ya'll can't stick to the topic.
COMMON GROUND please!  | |