The Westminster Confession of Faith and Logic
By W. Gary Crampton
Copyright 1999 © First Presbyterian Church of Rowlett
In the Westminster Confession of Faith (1:6) we read:
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.
B. B. Warfield, commenting on this section of the Confession, writes:
It must be observed, however, that the teachings and prescriptions of Scripture
are not confined by the Confession to what is ‘expressly set down in Scripture.’
Men are required to believe and obey not only what is ‘expressly set down in
Scripture.’ but also what ‘by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from
Scripture.’ This is the strenuous and universal contention of the Reformed
theology against the Socinians and Arminians, who desired to confine the
authority of Scripture to its literal asservations; and it involves a
characteristic honoring of reason as the instrument for the ascertainment of
truth. We must depend upon our human faculties to ascertain what Scripture says;
we cannot suddenly abnegate them and refuse their guidance in determining what
Scripture means. This is not, of course, to make reason the ground of the
authority of inferred doctrines and duties. Reason is the instrument of
discovery of all doctrines and duties, whether ‘expressly set down in Scripture’
or ‘by good and necessary consequence deduced from Scripture’: but their
authority, when once discovered, is derived from God, who reveals them and
prescribes them in Scripture, either by literal assertion or by necessary
implication.
It is the Reformed contention, reflected here by the Confession, that the sense
of Scripture is Scripture, and that men are bound by its whole sense in all its
implications. The re-emurgence in recent controversies of the plea that the
authority of Scripture is to be confined to its expressed declarations, and that
human logic is not to be trusted in divine things, is, therefore, a direct
denial of a fundamental position of Reformed theology, explicitly affirmed in
the Confession, as well as an abnegation of fundamental reason, which would not
only render thinking in a system impossible, but would logically involve the
denial of the authority of all doctrine of the Trinity, and would logically
involve the denial of all doctrine whatsoever, since no single doctrine of
whatever simplicitly can be ascertained from Scripture except by the process of
the understanding. It is, therefore, an unimportant incident that the recent
plea against the use of human logic in determining doctrine has been most
sharply put forward in order to justify the rejection of a doctrine which is
explicitly taught, and that repeatedly of a doctrine which is explicitly, in the
very letter of Scripture; if the plea is valid at all, it destroys at once our
confidence in all doctrines, no one of which is ascertained or formulated
without the aid of human logic.[1]
What Warfield is asserting (and agreeing with) is that the Westminster divines
had a high view of logic. Logic, human logic, says the Confession (and Warfield
as well), is a necessary tool to be used in the study and exposition of the Word
of God. In fact, so important was the proper use of logic to the divines, that
they required gospel ministers to be trained in this area prior to ordination.
In the section entitled “The Form of Church Government,” we read that a part of
the ordination examination tested “whether he [the ordinand] hath skill in
logick and philosophy.”
Warfield is not the only one who has understood the importance of logic. Another
twentieth century theologian, James O. Buswell, says: “When we accept the laws
of logic, we are not accepting laws external to God to which he must be subject,
but we are accepting laws of truth which are derived from God’s holy character.”
And centuries earlier Augustine wrote: “The science of reasoning is of very
great service in searching into and unraveling all sorts of questions that come
up in Scripture….The validity of logical sequences is not a thing devised by
men, but it is observed and noted by them that they may be able to learn and
teach it; for it exists eternally in the reason of things, and has its origin
with God.”[2]
What Buswell and Augustine are saying is that logic is eternal; it is not
created; it “has its origin with God.” Or as the twentieth century theologian
and philosopher Gordon Clark has written: “Logic is fixed, universal, necessary,
and irreplaceable…[because] God is a rational being, the architecture of whose
mind is logic.”[3]
Some Aberrant Views of Logic
As important as the proper use of logic is for an understanding of God and His
Word, there are a number of modern day theologians and philosophers who
deprecate logic. They teach that there is no point of contact between divine
logic and human logic. Here we have what Ronald Nash calls “the religious revolt
against logic.”[4] And the revolt is not only from the neo-orthodox camp. One
would expect men such as Karl Barth, Emil Brunner, and Thomas Torrance to take
such an irrational position. After all, neo-orthodoxy is known as the “the
theology of paradox,” in which faith must “curb” logic. But this pervasive
spirit of misology has infected even those who make no claim to neo-orthodoxy.
Herman Dooyeweerd, for example, avers that there is a “boundary” which exists
between God and the cosmos. The laws of logic, of valid inference, which are
applicable under the boundary do not have any application with regard to God.
Then there is Donald Bloesch, a well known (so called) evangelical theologian.
In his Holy Scripture: Revelation, Inspiration & Interpretation,[5] Bloesch
openly denies that there is any point of contact between God’s logic and human
logic (121, 293). The truth of biblical revelation, says the author, can never
“be caught through the analytical methods of formal logic” (55). Bloesch frankly
acknowledges that “I depart from some of my evangelical collegues in that I
understand the divine content of Scripture not as rationally comprehensible
teaching but as the mystery of salvation declared in Jesus Christ” (114).
Incredulously, he even goes so far as to say that “revelation cannot be
assimilated into a comprehensive, rational system of truth” (289). Apparently
Dr. Bloesch is more neo-orthodox than he is willing to admit.
Sadly, the “religious revolt against logic” extends into the camp of genuine
orthodoxy as well. Edwin H. Palmer, for one, teaches that the doctrine of God’s
absolute sovereignty and man’s responsibility is a logical paradox. It cannot be
resolved before the bar of human reason. The Calvinist, says Palmer, “in the
face of all logic,” believes both sides of the paradox to be true, even though
he “realizes that what he advocates is ridiculous.”[6]
Then there is Cornelius Van Til. Dr. Van Til is well known for his assertion
that the Bible is full of logical paradoxes. John Robbins, in his Cornelius Van
Til: The Man and the Myth, [7]cites numerous examples of Van Til’s deprecation
of logic. For example, in spite of the fact that the Bible teaches that God is
not the author of confusion (1 Corinthians 14:33), Dr. Van Til maintains that
“all teaching of Scripture is apparently contradictory” (25). He frequently
speaks of logic (not the misuse of logic, but logic itself) in a disparaging
manner. He speaks of “logicism” and “the static categories of logic.” And with
references to the Confession’s statement quoted above, Van Til says: “This
statement should not be used as a justification for deductive exegesis” (24,
25). Yet, deductive exegesis is precisely what the Confession is endorsing.
Ronald Nash also sees the problem with Van Til and his deprevation of human
logic. Nash writes, “I once asked Van Til if, when some human being knows that 1
plus 1 equals 2, that human being’s knowledge is identical with God’s knowledge.
The question, I thought was innocent enough. Van Til’s only answer was to smile,
shrug his shoulders, and declare that the question was improper in the sense
that it had no answer. It had no answer because any proposed answer would
presume what it is impossible for Van Til, namely, that laws like those found in
mathematics and logic apply beyond the [Dooyeweerdian] boundary.”[8] In other
words, unlike Warfield, Buswell, Augustine, Clark, and the Westminster divines,
Van Til, like Herman Dooyeweerd, assumed that the laws of logic are created
rather than eternally existing in the mind of God.
The Biblical View of Logic[9]
The Bible teaches that God is a God of knowledge (1 Samuel 2:3; Romans 16:27).
Being eternally omniscient (Psalm 139:1-6), God is not only the source of his
own knowledge, he is also the source and determiner of all truth. That which is
true is true because God thinks it so. As the Westminster Confession (1:4),
says, God “is truth itself.” And since that which is not rational cannot be true
(1 Timothy 6:20), it follows that God must be rational; the laws of logic are
the way he thinks.
This is, of course, what the Bible teaches. God is not the author of confusion
(1 Corinthians 14:33), he is a rational being, the Lord God of truth (Psalm
31:5). So much does the Bible speak of God as the God of logic, that in John 1:1
Jesus Christ is called the “Logic” of God: “In the beginning was the Logos, and
the Logos was with God, and the Logos was God” (the English word “logic” is
derived from the Greek word Logos used in this verse). John 1:1 emphasized the
rationality of God the Son. Logic is as eternal as God himself because “the
Logos is God.” Hence, God and logic cannot be separated; logic is the
characteristic of God’s thinking. In the words of Clark, “God and logic are one
and the same first principle, for John wrote that Logic was God.”[10]
This will give us a greater understanding of the relationship of logic and
Scripture. Since Logic is God, and since Scripture is a part of “the mind of
Christ” (1 Corinthians 2:16), it follows that Scripture must be logical. What is
said in Scripture is God’s infallible and inerrant thought. It expresses the
mind of God, because God and his Word are one. Hence, as the Confession (1:5)
teaches, the Bible is a logically consistent book: there is a “consent of all
the parts.” This is why Paul could “reason” with persons “from the Scriptures”
(Acts 17:2).
Further, logic is embedded in Scripture. The very first verse of the Bible, “in
the beginning God created the heavens and the earth,” necessitates the validity
of the most fundamental law of logic: the law of contradiction (A is not non-A).
Genesis 1:1 teaches that God is the Creator of all things. Too, it says that he
created “in the beginning.” It does not teach, therefore, that God is not the
Creator of all things, nor does it maintain that God created all things 100 or
1000 years after the beginning. This verse assumes that the words God: created,
beginning, and so forth, all have definite meanings. It also assumes that they
do not mean certain things. For speech to be intellible, words must have
univocal meanings. What makes the words meaningful and revelation and
communication possible is that each word conforms to the law of contradiction.
This most fundamental of laws of logic cannot be proved. For any attempt to
prove the law of contradiction would presuppose the truth of the law and
therefore beg the question. Simply put, it is not possible to reason without
using the law of contradiction. In this sense, the laws of logic are axiomatic.
But they are only axiomatic because they are fixed or embedded in the Word of
God.
Also fixed in Scripture are the two other principle laws of logic: the law of
indentity (A is A) and the law of the excluded middle (A is either B or non-B).
The former is taught in Exodus 3:14, in the name of God itself: “I AM WHO I AM.”
And the latter is found, for example, in the words of Christ: “He who is not
with Me is against Me” (Luke 11:23).
Logic, then, is embedded in Scripture. This is why Scripture, rather than the
law of contradiction, is selected as the axiomatic starting point of Christian
epistemology. Similarly, God is not made the axiom, because all of our knowledge
of God comes from Scripture. “God” as an axiom, without Scripture, is merely a
name. Scripture, as the axiom, defines God. This is why the Westminster
Confession of Faith begins with the doctrine of Scripture in Chapter 1. Chapters
2-5, on the doctrine of God, follow.
As we are taught in the Bible, man is the image and glory of God (Genesis 1:27;
1 Corinthians 11:7). God “formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed
into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul” (Genesis
2:7). Adam became a type of soul that is superior to that of nonrational animals
(2 Peter 2:12; Jude 10). Man, as God’s image bearer, is a rational being
(Colossians 3:10). Again, this is why the apostle Paul could spend time
“reasoning” with his auditors “from the Scriptures” (Acts 17:2).
Moreover, because Christ is the Logos who “gives [epistemological] light to
every man who comes into the world” (John 1:9), we are to understand that there
is a point at which man’s logic meets God’s logic. In fact, John 1:9 denies that
logic is arbitrary (as per Friedrich Nietzsche, John Dewey, and Jean-Paul
Sartre); it also denies polylogism, i.e., that there may be many kinds of logic
(as per multi-culturalism). According to John, there is only one kind of logic:
God’s logic. And the Logos gives to every image bearer of God the ability to
think logically.
Man, then, has the capacity to think logically, to communicate with God, and to
have God communicate with him. God created Adam with a mind structured in a
manner similar to his own. In the Scripture, God has given man an intelligible
message, “words of truth and reason” (Acts 26:25). God has also given man
language that enables him to rationally converse with his Creator (Exodus 4:11).
Such thought and conversation would not be possible without the laws of logic.
Logic is indispensable to all (God-given)human thought and speech. This being
the case, we must insist that there is no “mere human logic” as contrasted with
a divine logic. Such fallacious thinking does disservice to the Logos of God
himself.
One might argue here that the fall of man rendered logic defective. But this not
the case. The noetic effects of sin indeed hinder man’s ability to reason
correctly (Romans 1:21), but this in no way implies that the laws of logic
themselves are impinged. Clark writes:
“Logic, the law of contradiction, is not affected by sin. Even if everyone
constantly violated the laws of logic, they would not be less true than if
everyone constantly observed them. Or, to use another example, no matter how
many errors in subtraction can be found on the stubs of our check-books,
mathematics itself is unaffected.”[11]
As we have seen, the laws of logic are eternally fixed in the mind of God, and
they cannot be affected; they are eternally valid.
Conclusion
John Robbins has correctly said that “there is no greater threat facing the
Christian church at the end of the twentieth century than the irrationalism that
now controls our entire culture….Hedonism and secular humanism are not to be
feared nearly so much as the belief that logic, ‘mere human logic,’ is an
untrustworthy tool for understanding the Bible.”[12]
To avoid this irrationalism, which in effect denies that man is the image and
glory of God, we must return to the Logos theology of the Westminster divines.
We must insist that logic and truth are the same for man as they are for God.
This is not to say that man knows as much truth as God knows. God is omniscient;
he is truth itself, and that which is true is true simply because he thinks it
to be so. This, of course, is not the case with man. Whereas truth to God is
intuitive, man learns truth discursively. But it is the same truth. This is of
necessity the case, because God knows all truth, and unless man knows that which
God knows, his ideas cannot be true. It is essential, then, to maintain that
there is a coincidence between the logic and truth of God and the logic and
truth of man. God thinks logically and he calls on man to do the same.
Gordon Clark says it this way:
Christianity claims that God is the God of truth; that he is wisdom; that his
Son is his Logos, the logic, the Word of God. Man was created a reasonable being
so that he could understand God’s message to him….Christianity is a rational
religion. It has an intellectually apprehensible content. Its revelation can be
understood.[13]
What must be done? As Robbins states, we need to “embrace with passion the
Scriptural ideals of clarity in both thought and speech; let us recognize, with
Christ and the Westminster Assembly, the indispensability of logic…and let us
defend the consistency and intelligibility of the Bible. Then, and only then,
will Christianity have a bright and glorious future in America and throughout
the earth.”[14]
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[1]Benjamin B. Warfield, The Westminster Assembly and Its Work (Edmonton,
Canada: Still Waters Revival Books, 1991), 226, 227.
[2]Cited in Elihu Carranza, Logic Workbook for Logic by Gordon H Clark
(Jefferson, Maryland: The Trinity Foundation, 1992), 97, 99.
[3]Gordon H. Clark, The Trinity Review (November/December, 1980), edited by John
W. Robbins, 4.
[4]Ronald H. Nash, The Word of God and the Mind of Man (Grand Rapids, Michigan:
Zondervan, 1982), Chapter 9.
[5]Donald G. Bloesch, Holy Scripture: Revelation, Inspiration & Interpretation
(Downers Grove, Illinois: Intervarsity Press, 1994).
[6]Edwin H. Palmer, The Five Points of Calvinism (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker
Book House, 1972), 85.
[7]John R. Robbins, Cornelius Van Til: The Man and the Myth (Jefferson,
Maryland: The Trinity Foundation, 1986). The quotes used here are taken from
Robbins’ book, where one may also find the title and page number of Van Til’s
statements. As best as I can determine, Robbins has accurately quoted Van Til.
[8]Nash, op. cit., 100.
[9]Much of this article from this point on will follow Gordon H. Clark’s “God
and Logic,” The Trinity Review (November/December, 1980).
[10]Ibid., 2.
[11]Gordon H. Clark, A Christian View of Men and Things (Jefferson, Maryland:
The Trinity Foundation, 1952, 1980), 299.
[12]Robbins, op. cit., 39.
[13]Cited in The Philosophy of Gordon H. Clark (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1968), edited by Ronald H. Nash,
137.
[14]Robbins, op. cit., 40.