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Part Five: The Doctrine of The Church and of The Means of GraceThe Means Of Grace
I. The Means of Grace in General
The phrase "means of grace" could stretch to cover almost anything God uses to draw people closer to Himself. The Church, providential experiences, even faith and prayer could all qualify in a broad sense. But theology has good reason to draw the circle tighter. Strictly speaking, the means of grace are the Word and the sacraments: objective channels Christ instituted in the Church, through which the Holy Spirit ordinarily communicates His saving grace.
Why not include the Church itself? Because the Church's power to promote God's work consists entirely in administering the Word and the sacraments. It has no separate pipeline of its own. And why not prayer, faith, and conversion? Because these are primarily fruits of God's grace and subjective conditions for enjoying covenant blessings, not objective ordinances. They are responses to grace, not channels of it. Think of it like the difference between a water main and a cup: the main delivers the water, the cup receives it. Both matter, but they do different things.
Some theologians have tried to widen the list. One included prayer alongside the Word and sacraments. Another added both the Church and prayer. But these expansions blur a distinction worth keeping. The means of grace in the strict sense are those divinely appointed instruments through which grace flows, not those human acts through which grace is received. And they are never self-sufficient. Disconnected from Christ, disconnected from the Spirit's power, they accomplish nothing at all.
- The means of grace in the strict sense are the Word and the sacraments, objective channels Christ instituted for communicating grace through the Holy Spirit
- The Church is not a distinct means of grace because its power consists entirely in administering the Word and sacraments
- Prayer, faith, and conversion are primarily fruits of divine grace and subjective conditions for enjoying covenant blessings, not objective ordinances
- Hodge added prayer to the means of grace, while McPherson added both the Church and prayer alongside the Word and sacraments
A. THE IDEA OF THE MEANS OF GRACE.
Fallen man receives all the blessings of salvation out of the eternal fountain of the grace of God, in virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ and through the operation of the Holy Spirit. While the Spirit can and does in some respects operate immediately on the soul of the sinner, He has seen fit to bind Himself largely to the use of certain means in the communication of divine grace. The term "means of grace" is not found in the Bible, but is nevertheless a proper designation of the means that are indicated in the Bible. At the same time the term is not very definite and may have a far more comprehensive meaning than it ordinarily has in theology. The Church may be represented as the great means of grace which Christ, working through the Holy Spirit, uses for the gathering of the elect, the edification of the saints, and the building up of His spiritual body. He qualifies her for this great task by endowing her with all kinds of spiritual gifts, and by the institution of the offices for the administration of the Word and the sacraments, which are all means to lead the elect to their eternal destiny. But the term may have an even wider scope. The whole providential guidance of the saints, through prosperity and adversity, often becomes a means by which the Holy Spirit leads the elect to Christ or to an ever closer communion with Him. It is even possible to include in the means of grace all that is required of men for the reception and the continued enjoyment of the blessings of the covenant, such as faith, conversion, spiritual warfare, and prayer. It is neither customary nor desirable, however, to include all this under the term "means of grace." The Church is not a means of grace alongside of the Word and the sacraments, because her power in promoting the work of the grace of God consists only in the administration of these. She is not instrumental in communicating grace, except by means of the Word and of the sacraments. Moreover, faith, conversion, and prayer, are first of all fruits of the grace of God, though they may in turn become instrumental in strengthening the spiritual life. They are not objective ordinances, but subjective conditions for the possession and enjoyment of the blessings of the covenant. Consequently, it is better not to follow Hodge when he includes prayer, nor McPherson when he adds to the Word and the sacraments both the Church and prayer. Strictly speaking, only the Word and the sacraments can be regarded as means of grace, that is, as objective channels which Christ has instituted in the Church, and to which He ordinarily binds Himself in the communication of His grace. Of course these may never be dissociated from Christ, nor from the powerful operation of the Holy Spirit, nor from the Church which is the appointed organ for the distribution of the blessings of divine grace. They are in themselves quite ineffective and are productive of spiritual results only through the efficacious operation of the Holy Spirit.
Four characteristics set the Word and sacraments apart from everything else God might use to bless His people.
First, they are instruments of special grace, not common grace. Common grace restrains evil and promotes civic virtue in the world at large. Special grace is the grace that removes sin and renews the sinner in the image of God. The Word and sacraments serve that deeper, transforming work.
Second, they are effective in themselves, not because of some outside experience tacked onto them. A dramatic life event might strengthen someone's faith, but only because that experience gets interpreted through Scripture. The Word and sacraments need no such outside help. Their spiritual power depends only on the operation of the Holy Spirit.
Third, they are continuous, not accidental. They are not occasionally or coincidentally linked to God's grace. They are the regularly ordained means for communicating saving grace, permanently established in the Church. Think of them as the infrastructure, not a lucky coincidence.
Fourth, they are official means of the Church. The preaching of the Word and the administration of the sacraments are means officially instituted in the Church by Christ. Some Reformed theologians went further, arguing that these means presuppose the new life already implanted in the soul and serve only to strengthen it. On this view, the means of grace are really means of sanctification. There is truth in this, since the seed of new life is planted immediately by the Spirit. But the broader Reformed view acknowledges that the Spirit also uses the preaching of the gospel to bring about the new birth itself.
- They are instruments of special grace that removes sin and renews the sinner, not merely instruments of common grace
- Their spiritual efficacy depends only on the Holy Spirit's operation, not on connection with experiences outside the means
- They are the regularly ordained means for communicating saving grace, not merely occasionally or accidentally associated with it
- The preaching of the Word and the administration of the sacraments are means officially instituted in the Church by Christ
- Some Reformed theologians held that the means presuppose new life already implanted in the soul and serve only to strengthen it further
B. CHARACTERISTICS OF THE WORD AND THE SACRAMENTS AS MEANS OF GRACE.
The fact that one can speak of means of grace in a rather general sense makes it imperative to point to the distinctive characteristics of the means of grace in the technical or restricted sense of the word.
1. They are instruments, not of common but of, special grace, the grace that removes sin and renews the sinner in conformity with the image of God. It is true that the Word of God may and in some respects actually does enrich those who live under the gospel with some of the choicest blessings of common grace in the restricted sense of the word; but it, as well as the sacraments, comes into consideration here only as a means of grace in the technical sense of the word. And the means of grace in this sense are always connected with the beginning and the progressive operation of the special grace of God, that is redemptive grace, in the hearts of sinners.
2. They are in themselves and not in virtue of their connection with things not included in them, means of grace. Striking experiences may, and undoubtedly sometimes do, serve to strengthen the work of God in the hearts of believers, but this does not constitute them means of grace in the technical sense, since they accomplish this only in so far as these experiences are interpreted in the light of God's Word, through which the Holy Spirit operates. The Word and the sacraments are in themselves means of grace; their spiritual efficacy is dependent only on the operation of the Holy Spirit.
3. They are continuous instruments of God's grace, and not in any sense of the word exceptional. This means that they are not associated with the operation of God's grace merely occasionally or in a more or less accidental way, but are the regularly ordained means for the communication of the saving grace of God and are as such of perpetual value. The Heidelberg Catechism asks in Question 65, "Since, then, we are made partakers of Christ and all His benefits by faith only, whence comes this faith?" And the answer is, "From the Holy Spirit, who works it in our hearts by the preaching of the holy gospel, and confirms it by the use of the holy sacraments."
4. They are the official means of the
Church of Jesus Christ. The
preaching
of the Word
(or, the Word preached) and the
administration
of the sacraments (or,
the sacraments administered) are the means
officially instituted in the Church, by which the
Holy Spirit
works and confirms faith in the hearts of men. Some Reformed theologians
limit the
idea of the means of grace still more by saying that they are
administered only within
the visible Church, and that they presuppose the existence of the
principle of the new
life in the soul. Shedd and Dabney both speak of them, without any
qualification, as
"means of
sanctification." Says the former: "When the world of unregenerate men
are
said to have the means of grace, the means of
conviction
under common grace, not of
sanctification under special grace, are intended."
The Roman Catholic system put the Church itself at the top. The Church was the primary means of grace, the institution through which Christ continues His work on earth. The Word had only preparatory significance. The real action happened in the sacraments, which were said to work ex opere operato (by the act performed). Grace was conceived as a gratia elevans, a supernatural physical power infused into the natural man, with the grace contained in the sacramental elements as a kind of substance. No Church, no sacraments, no salvation.
The Reformation shifted the center of gravity. The Word of God, not the sacrament, became primary. But the shift was not uniform. The Lutheran view gave great prominence to the Word, yet still conceived of grace as a sort of substance contained in the means, inseparable from them. In the Lord's Supper, the body and blood of Christ were said to be "in, with, and under" the bread and wine. And it was especially opposition to the subjectivity of the Anabaptists that pushed the Lutheran position toward emphasizing divine institution over the recipient's faith.
The Mystics and Anabaptists swung to the opposite extreme. They virtually denied that God uses external means at all, holding that God or the inner light works directly in the heart. The external Word belongs to the natural world and cannot produce spiritual results. Their reasoning rested on a dualistic view of nature and grace that placed a wall between the physical and the spiritual.
The Socinians, Arminians, and eighteenth-century Rationalists landed in yet another place. They ascribed to the means of grace only a moral efficacy through persuasion, without any mystical operation of the Holy Spirit. The emphasis fell on what humans do in the means of grace rather than on what God accomplishes through them.
- The Roman Catholic view held the Church as the primary means of grace, the Word as preparatory, and the sacraments as working ex opere operato
- Roman Catholic theology conceived sacramental grace as a gratia elevans, a supernatural physical power infused into the natural man, with grace contained in the means as substance
- Luther shifted emphasis to the Word as primary but still conceived of grace as a sort of substance contained in the means and inseparable from them
- Luther taught the body and blood of Christ are "in, with, and under" the elements of bread and wine
- Luther's opposition to the subjectivity of the Anabaptists led him to ground sacramental effectiveness in divine institution rather than the recipient's faith
- The Mystics and Anabaptists virtually denied that God uses external means, holding that God or the inner light works directly in the heart
- The Mystics' denial of the means of grace rested on a dualistic view of nature and grace
- The Socinians, Arminians, and Rationalists ascribed to the means only a moral efficacy through persuasion, without any mystical operation of the Holy Spirit
C. HISTORICAL VIEWS RESPECTING THE MEANS OF GRACE.
There has been considerable difference of opinion respecting the means of grace in the Church of Jesus Christ. The early Church does not furnish us with anything very definite on this point. There was far more emphasis on the sacraments than on the Word of God. Baptism was rather generally regarded as the means by which sinners were regenerated, while the eucharist stood out as the sacrament of sanctification. In course of time, however, certain definite views were developed.
1. THE ROMAN CATHOLIC VIEW. While the Roman Catholics regarded even relics and images as means of grace, they singled out in particular the Word and the sacraments. At the same time they failed to give due prominence to the Word, and ascribed to it only preparatory significance in the work of grace. As compared with the Word, the sacraments were considered to be the real means of grace. In the system that was gradually developed the Church of Rome recognizes a means that is even superior to the sacraments. The Church itself is regarded as the primary means of grace. In it Christ continues His divine-human life on earth, performs His prophetic, priestly, and kingly work, and through it He communicates the fulness of His grace and truth. This grace serves especially to raise man from the natural to the supernatural order. It is a gratia elevans, a supernatural physical power, infused into the natural man through the sacraments working ex opere operato. In the sacraments the visible signs and the invisible grace are inseparably connected. In fact, the grace of God is contained in the means as a sort of substance, is conveyed through the channel of the means, and is therefore absolutely bound to the means. Baptism regenerates man ex opere operato, and the even more important eucharist raises his spiritual life to a higher level. Apart from Christ, from the Church, and from the sacrament, there is no salvation.
2. THE LUTHERAN VIEW. With the Reformation the emphasis was shifted from the sacraments to the Word of God. Luther gave great prominence to the Word of God as the primary means of grace. He pointed out that the sacraments have no significance apart from the Word and are in fact merely the visible Word. He did not entirely succeed in correcting the Roman Catholic error as to the inseparable connection between the outward means and the inward grace communicated through them. He, too, conceived of the grace of God as a sort of substance contained in the means and not to be obtained apart from the means. The Word of God is in itself always efficacious and will effect a spiritual change in man, unless he puts a stumblingblock in the way. And the body and blood of Christ is "in, with, and under" the elements of bread and wine, so that they who eat and drink the latter also receive the former, though this will be to their advantage only if they receive them in the proper manner. It was especially his opposition to the subjectivity of the Anabaptists that caused Luther to stress the objective character of the sacraments and to make their effectiveness dependent on their divine institution rather than on the faith of the recipients. The Lutherans did not always steer clear of the idea that the sacraments function ex opere operato.
3. THE VIEW OF THE MYSTICS. Luther had to contend a great deal with the mystical Anabaptists, and it was especially his reaction to their views that determined his final view of the means of grace. The Anabaptists, and other mystical sects of the age of the Reformation and of later times, virtually deny that God avails Himself of means in the distribution of His grace. They stress the fact that God is absolutely free in communicating His grace, and therefore can hardly be conceived of as bound to such external means. Such means after all belong to the natural world, and have nothing in common with the spiritual world. God, or Christ, or the Holy Spirit, or the inner light, work directly in the heart, and both the Word and the sacraments can only serve to indicate or to symbolize this internal grace. This whole conception is determined by a dualistic view of nature and grace.
4. THE RATIONALISTIC VIEW. The Socinians of the days of the Reformation, on the other hand, moved too far in the opposite direction. Socinus himself did not even regard baptism as a rite destined to be permanent in the Church of Jesus Christ, but his followers did not go to that extreme. They recognized both baptism and the Lord's Supper as rites of permanent validity, but ascribed to them only a moral efficacy. This means that they thought of the means of grace as working only through moral persuasion, and did not associate them at all with any mystical operation of the Holy Spirit. In fact, they placed the emphasis more on what man did in the means of grace than on what God accomplished through them, when they spoke of them as mere external badges of profession and (of the sacraments) as memorials. The Arminians of the seventeenth century and the Rationalists of the eighteenth century shared this view.
5. THE REFORMED VIEW. While reaction to the Anabaptists caused the Lutherans to move in the direction of Rome and to bind the grace of God to the means in the most absolute sense —— a position also taken by High Church Anglicans —, the Reformed Churches continued the original view of the Reformation. They deny that the means of grace can of themselves confer grace, as if they were endued with a magical power to produce holiness. God and God only is the efficient cause of salvation. And in the distribution and communication of His grace He is not absolutely bound to the divinely appointed means through which He ordinarily works, but uses them to serve His gracious purposes according to His own free will. But while they do not regard the means of grace as absolutely necessary and indispensable, they strongly oppose the idea that these means may be treated as purely accidental and indifferent and can be neglected with impunity. God has appointed them as the ordinary means through which He works His grace in the hearts of sinners, and their wilful neglect can only result in spiritual loss.
The Reformed view threads a needle between extremes. Against the Mystics, it insists that special grace operates only in the sphere where the means of grace function. God is a God of order who ordinarily uses the means He ordained. Against Rome and the Lutherans, it insists that grace is not a substance deposited inside the means. God is not absolutely bound to the means but ordinarily uses them, and their willful neglect can only result in spiritual loss. The means are neither magical nor optional.
There is one exception to the general rule. In the implanting of the new life, the grace of God works immediately, without the mediation of the Word or sacrament. But even this happens only within the sphere where the means of grace are at work. Regeneration is not the result of moral persuasion, and it is not triggered by the means themselves. It is a direct act of God. But once that seed is planted, everything else, the drawing out and nourishing of the new life, happens through the Word and sacraments.
The Reformed also insist, against every variety of Mysticism, that all spiritual knowledge comes through the Word. There are no special revelations, no private channels of insight that bypass Scripture. The moment you abandon that principle, you drift into a sea of boundless subjectivity where anyone's inner experience becomes authoritative. The Word is the anchor.
- God is not absolutely bound to the means of grace but ordinarily uses them, and their willful neglect can only result in spiritual loss
- In the implanting of the new life (regeneration), God's grace works immediately without the mediation of Word or sacrament, though only within the sphere where the means function
- The Reformed insist against all kinds of Mystics that all spiritual knowledge is derived from and mediated by the Word of God
D. CHARACTERISTIC ELEMENTS IN THE REFORMED DOCTRINE OF THE MEANS OF GRACE.
For a proper understanding of the Reformed doctrine of the means of grace the following points deserve special emphasis.
1. The special grace of God operates only in the sphere in which the means of grace function. This truth must be maintained over against the Mystics, who deny the necessity of the means of grace. God is a God of order, who in the operation of His grace ordinarily employs the means which He Himself has ordained. This, of course, does not mean that He has Himself become subservient to the appointed means and could not possibly work without them in the communication of His grace, but only that it has pleased Him to bind Himself, except in the case of infants, to the use of these means.
2. On a single point, namely, in the implanting of the new life, the grace of God works immediately, that is, without the use of these means as instruments. But even so it works only in the sphere of the means of grace, since these are absolutely required in drawing out and nourishing the new life. This is a direct negation of the position of Rationalism, which represents regeneration as the result of moral suasion.
3. While the grace of God generally operates mediately, it is not inherent in the means as a divine deposit, but accompanies the use of these. This must be maintained in opposition to the Roman Catholics, the High Church Anglicans, and the Lutherans, who proceed on the assumption that the means of grace always operate in virtue of an inherent power, though their operation may be made ineffective by the condition or attitude of the recipient.
4. The Word of God may never be separated from the sacraments, but must always accompany them, since they are virtually only a visible representation of the truth that is conveyed to us by the Word. In the Church of Rome the Word retires into the background as having only preparatory significance, while the sacraments, considered apart from the Word, are regarded as the real means of grace.
5. All the knowledge which is obtained by the recipient of divine grace, is wrought in him by means of the Word and is derived from the Word. This position must be maintained in opposition to all kinds of Mystics, who lay claim to special revelations and to a spiritual knowledge that is not mediated by the Word, and who thereby lead us into a sea of boundless subjectivity.