A paladin is a heroic champion or strong defender of a cause. Though Arminius was charged in the Preface to the Acts of the Synod of Dort as having "received a letter from the pope promising financial rewards in
return for advocacy of Roman theological views,"1 Calvinist theologian Richard A. Muller confesses that "Arminius was certainly not a crypto-Catholic or a Jesuit sympathizer."2
Of course, the Synod of Dort's assertion is a fabricated lie, as Arminius fiercely opposed Roman Catholicism and its papacy, having stated prior to his death: "I commend my soul, when it quits the body, into the hands of God . . . to the tranquility and peace, according to the Word of God, which becomes the Christian name; excluding the Papacy, with which no unity of faith, no bond of piety or Christian peace, can be maintained."3 From Arminius' own pen comes proof that the Calvinists of the Synod of Dort sought nothing more than to viciously insult the good and godly name of Arminius and his followers, the Remonstrants.
Of course, the Synod of Dort's assertion is a fabricated lie, as Arminius fiercely opposed Roman Catholicism and its papacy, having stated prior to his death: "I commend my soul, when it quits the body, into the hands of God . . . to the tranquility and peace, according to the Word of God, which becomes the Christian name; excluding the Papacy, with which no unity of faith, no bond of piety or Christian peace, can be maintained."3 From Arminius' own pen comes proof that the Calvinists of the Synod of Dort sought nothing more than to viciously insult the good and godly name of Arminius and his followers, the Remonstrants.
A certain minister in the Church of Amsterdam, where Arminius was pastor for fifteen years, claimed that Arminius believed the Pope was a member of the body of Christ (which was a scandalous confession during Arminius' post-Reformation era). Arminius, with regard to the Pope, writes: "I openly declare that I do not own the Roman Pontiff to be a member of Christ's body; but I account him an enemy, a traitor, a sacrilegious and blasphemous man, a tyrant, and a violent usurper of most unjust domination over the Church, the man of sin, the son of perdition, that most notorious outlaw. . . ."4
Furthermore, Arminius attributes the following titles to the Pope, and thinks they are justified:
Others disparage him with titles . . . such as, the adulterer and pimp of the Church, the false prophet, the destroyer and subverter of the Church, the enemy of God and the Antichrist, the wicked and perverse servant, who neither discharges the duties of a Bishop, nor is worthy to bear the name. Uniting ourselves with the band of those who bestow on the Roman Pontiff the epithets last cited, we assert that he is unworthy of the honourable titles which precede them, and that the latter disparaging epithets are attributed to him through his just deserts. . . .5
In what
sense, then, can the Calvinists of Dort conclude that Arminius was in
any sense whatsoever in connection with or favored Rome? To admit such is to expose
one's own prejudice and dishonest motives.
Pope Paul V,
born Camillo Borghese (1552-1621), succeeding Pope Leo XI (1535-1605),
was head of the Roman Catholic Church (1605-1621) during the time when
Arminius penned his words against both the Pope and the Romish Church. There
was nothing about the person or attitude of Pope Paul V which triggered
Arminius' response. What he wrote against the Pontiff
applied to all Popes, not just that current Pope.
In short, Arminius was
no friend of Rome, the Pope, or Roman Catholic dogma. Francis Gomarus,
Arminius' fiercest supralapsarian
opponent, argued that Arminius' theology, as taught in class at the
University of Leiden, "agreed with the Pelagians and the Jesuits."6
One expects such unwarranted, emotional outbursts from supralapsarians
like Gomarus. Arminius' theology, however, had nothing in common with either
Pelagianism or Roman Catholicism (that of the Jesuits).
Gomarus had no
appreciation for Arminius' use of Medieval scholasticism, used also by Romish scholars, which varied from Calvinistic teaching proper. Muller writes:
- Like
virtually every other Protestant theologian of his day, however,
Arminius did dip heavily into medieval scholastic sources. And it is
also the case that even when some account is taken of the polemical
nature of the accusations made against him, the views of the theologians
noted in the accusations -- Thomas Aquinas and two of the three Jesuits
mentioned, Molina and Suárez -- do appear to have influenced his
thought at certain crucial points.7
Even
granting this fact, however, Arminius remained in the Reformed
Protestant tradition. His aversion to Roman Catholic teaching and
refutation of Pelagian doctrines (to say nothing of his holding to the
five solas) cast him in a Reformed light. Note Muller's
admission that Arminius was like "every other Protestant theologian of
his day," all of whom dipped heavily into medieval scholastic sources.
We need
to be reminded that Christian doctrine, including our views on the
Atonement, God's sovereignty, and His Decrees, did not originate with the
Reformation. We must not overlook nearly fifteen hundred years of Church
teaching prior to the Reformers; we cling to what is true and discard error. But we should not ignore the fact that even
supralapsarian Gomarus drew from the scholastic tradition. Muller sums
up the difference between Arminius and Gomarus' use of scholasticism:
The theological or interpretive grid placed by Arminius over his reading of the body of Christian doctrine was different from the grid employed by Gomarus: the latter stood more firmly in the confessional tradition of the Reformed churches and drew on the scholastic tradition in an attempt to create an orthodox Reformed system; the former . . . drew on the scholastic tradition, including the contemporary efforts of Suárez and Molina, in order to move away from what he considered to be some of the more problematic formulations of his orthodox [though that is disputed!] Reformed colleagues and contemporaries.8
However, what cannot be denied by his opponents, admits Muller, is Arminius' biblicism.9
Arminius' opponents "were as intent on developing a biblical theology
as he was, and their scholasticism was certainly the equal of
Arminius's own."10
What is most plain regarding Arminius' scholastic theology, in conclusion, is its antagonism to Roman Catholicism. All charges against Arminius affirming Roman Catholic dogma are to be dismissed as baseless, and only serves to implicate the one making the charge as ill-informed at best and unChristian at worst.
What is most plain regarding Arminius' scholastic theology, in conclusion, is its antagonism to Roman Catholicism. All charges against Arminius affirming Roman Catholic dogma are to be dismissed as baseless, and only serves to implicate the one making the charge as ill-informed at best and unChristian at worst.
__________
1 Richard A. Muller, God,
Creation, and Providence in the Thought of Jacob Arminius: Sources and
Directions of Scholastic Protestantism in the Era of Early Orthodoxy (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1991), 29.
2 Ibid.
3 Kaspar Brandt, The Life of James Arminius, D. D., trans. John Guthrie (Charleston, SC: BiblioLife, LLC, 2009), 298.
4 James Arminius, "The Personal History of Arminius," in The Works of Arminius, the London edition, three volumes, trans. James and William Nichols (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1996), 1:298-99.
5 Ibid., 2:264-65.
6 Muller, 28.
7 Ibid., 29.
8 Ibid., 30.
9 Ibid.
10 Ibid.
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