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Van Til, Cornelius. Cornelius Van Til (1895-1987) was born in Holland, emigrated to the United States as a child, and grew up on a farm in Indiana. He attended Calvin College and Princeton Seminary. After pastoring a Michigan church, he was professor of apologetics at Westminster Theological Seminary from its founding in 1929 until his retirement in 1972. Francis *Schaeffer was among students who adopted a form of presuppositionalismunder his influence.
Van Til’s views on apologetics are expressed in The Defense of the Faith (1955; rev. 1963); The Protestant Doctrine of Scripture (1967); A Survey of Christian Epistemology (1969); A Christian Theory of Knowledge (1969); Introduction to Systematic Theology (1969); The Great Debate Today (1971); The Defense of Christianity and My Credo (1971); Common Grace and the Gospel (1972); Introduction to Systematic Theology (1974); Christian Apologetics (1975); Christian-Theistic Evidences (1976); and two undated works, Why I Believe in God, which is Van Til’s summary of his own view. Other significant writings include an introduction to an edition of B. B. Warfield’s Inspiration and Authority of the Bible, and an essay, “My Credo,” in Jerusalem and Athens (1971).
Philosophy of Apologetics. In a succinct statement of his own views, Van Til divided his philosophy of apologetics into three major areas: “my problem with the ‘traditional method,”’ “my understanding of the relationship between Christian and non-Christian, philosophically speaking,” and “my proposal for a consistently Christian methodology of apologetics.”
“Traditional” Apologetics. Van Til found seven problems in *classical apologetics:
1. It compromises God by maintaining that his existence is only “possible,” albeit “highly probable,” rather than ontologically and “rationally” necessary.
2. It compromises the counsel of God by not understanding it as the only all-inclusive, ultimate “cause” of whatsoever comes to pass.
3. It compromises the revelation of God in its necessity, its clarity, its sufficiency, and its authority.
4. It compromises human creation as the image-bearer of God by conceptualizing human creation and knowledge as independent of the Being and knowledge of God. Human beings need not “think God’s thoughts after him.”
5. It compromises humanity’s covenantal relationship with God by not understanding Adam’s representative action as absolutely determinative of the future.
6. It compromises the sinfulness resulting from the sin of Adam by not understanding ethical depravity as extending to the whole of life, even to thoughts and attitudes.
7. It compromises the grace of God by not understanding it as the necessary prerequisite for “renewal unto knowledge.” On the traditional view, men and women must renew themselves unto knowledge by the “right use of reason.”
Christian and Non-Christian Together. Van Til makes four basic points about the relationship of
faith and reason. Each reveals something about the nature of his apologetic approach
1. Both have presuppositions about the nature of reality.
a. The Christian presupposes a triune God and his redemptive plan for the universe as set forth once for all in Scripture.
b. The non-Christian presupposes a dialectic between “chance” and “regularity,” the former accounting for the origin of matter and life, the latter accounting for the current success of the scientific enterprise.
2. Neither Christian nor unbeliever can, as finite beings, use logic to say what reality must or cannot be.
a. The Christian attempts to understand the world through observation and logically ordering facts. This is done in self-conscious subjection to the plan of the self-attesting Christ of Scripture.
b. The non-Christian, while attempting to understand through observation, attempts to use logic to destroy the Christian position. Appealing to the nonrationality of “matter,” the unbeliever says that the chance-character of “facts” witnesses conclusively against the Christian worldview. Then the non-Christian maintains that the Christian story cannot possibly be true. Each human being must be autonomous. “Logic” must legislate what is “possible,” and possibility must exclude God.
3. Both claim that their position is “in accordance with the facts.”
a. The Christian claims this on the basis of experience in the light of the revelation of the self-attesting Christ in Scripture. Both the uniformity and the diversity of facts have at their foundation the all-embracing plan of God.
b. The non-Christian claims this after interpreting the facts and personal experience in the light of human autonomy. The unbeliever rests upon the ultimate “givenness” of the world and the amenability of matter to mind. No fact can deny human autonomy or attest to a divine origin of the world and humanity.
4. Both claim that their position is “rational.”
a. The Christian claims the faith position is self-consistent. The seemingly inexplicable can be explained through rational logic and the information available in Scripture.
b. The non-Christian may or may not claim that facts are totally self-consistent and in accord with the ultimate rationality of the cosmos. One who does claim total self-consistency will be crippled when it comes to explaining naturalistic “evolution.” If rational beings and a rational world sprang from pure chance and ultimate irrationality, such an explanation is in fact no explanation. A basis in irrational chance destroys predication.
A Consistently Apologetic Method. Van Til’s own positive view proposes:
1. that we use the same principle in apologetics that we use in theology—the self-attesting, self-explanatory Christ of Scripture.
2. that we no longer appeal to “common notions” on which Christian and non-Christian can agree. Their “common ground” is that each person and each person’s world are what Scripture says they are.
3. that we appeal to human beings as God’s image-bearer. To do so we set the non-Christian’s rational autonomy against Christian dependence. Human knowledge depends on God’s knowledge, as revealed in the person and by the Spirit of Christ.
4. that we claim, therefore, that Christianity alone is reasonable. It is wholly irrational to hold any other position than that of Christianity. Christianity alone does not slay reason on the altar of “chance.”
5. that we argue, therefore, by “presupposition.” The Christian, as did Tertullian, must contest the very principles of an opponent’s position. The only “proof ’ of the Christian position is that, unless its truth is presupposed, there is no possibility of “proving” anything. The state of affairs proclaimed by Christianity is the necessary foundation for “proof ’ itself.
6. that we preach with the understanding that acceptance of the Christ of Scripture comes about only as the Holy Spirit uses inescapably clear evidence to open a fleeing sinner’s eyes to see things as they truly are.
7. that we present the message and evidence for the Christian position as clearly as possible. Because a human being is what the Christian says he or she is, the non-Christian can understand intellectually the issues involved. To an extent, the Christian message tells what the unbeliever already knows but seeks to suppress. This reminder provides a fertile ground for the Holy Spirit. According to God’s sovereign grace, the Spirit may grant the non-Christian repentance and knowledge of him who is life eternal.
Revelaiional Presuppositionalism. Rejection of Classical Apologetics. Van Til rejects *classical apologetics, which he calls the “traditional” method. In its place he substitutes a presuppositional apologetics. He believes the classical apologetics of *Thomas Aquinas is based on human autonomy. “There is on this basis no genuine point of contact with the mind of the natural man at all. . . . The revelation of a self-sufficient God can have no meaning for a mind that thinks of itself as ultimately autonomous.” The problem is “how it may be known that the God of reason and the God of faith are the same” (Defense of the Faith, 73, 94, 127). He described the Thomistic method as “a positionhalf way between that of Christianity and that of paganism.” Theistic arguments are invalid, and, at any rate, they do not lead to the “self-contained ontological trinity of Scripture.” Thomistic apologetics reduces the gospel through rationalism as to make it acceptable to the natural man (Great Debate Today, 91).
He insisted that unless the God of the Bible is the foundation of human experience, experience operates in a void (Common Grace and the Gospel, 192). So Van Til begins with the Triune God and his self-revelation in Holy Scripture. Thus, his positionhas been called revelational presuppositionalism.
Van Til ,s Apologetic Method. The method of implication. Early in his career, Van Til called his apologetic a “method of implication” (Survey of Christian Epistemology, 6-10; 201-2). John Frame said the phrase suggested to Van Til a combination inductive and deductive approach. The general has priority over the particular (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 311).
Reasoning by presupposition. In his later writings, Van Til typically calls his method “reasoning by presupposition” (ibid., 312). He asserted that “to argue by presupposition is to indicate what are the epistemological and metaphysical principles that underlie and control one’s method.” The issues cannot be settled by appealing to mutually-agreed-upon “facts” or “laws.” The worldviews are too far apart for that. What must be searched out on both sides is a final reference-point that can make the facts and laws intelligible (Defense of the Faith, 99-100).
Van Til’s reference point is so Scripture-dependent that it has been called revelational presuppositionalism He rejects the rational presuppositionalismof GordonH. *Clark, believing that his stress on the law of noncontradiction is not subservient to God’s sovereignty. Likewise, Van Til disagreed with Edward John *Carnell’s presuppositionalism, known as systematic coherency. Systematic coherency combines the law of noncontradiction, factual evidence, and existential adequacy as tests for truth.
Indirect method. Van Til described the method as “indirect” to distinguish it from “direct” classical evidential arguments. It was indirect because it showed the truth of Christianity by showing the contradiction in opposing views. An opponent’s position is reduced to an absurdity. Frame adds that this suggests “a model like that of the indirect argument in mathematics. In that model, one proves a proposition by assuming the opposite” (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 313-14).
External and internal method. Van Til’s apologetic method is both external and internal. He argues:
We should address the unbeliever always from our own presuppositional commitment. From that commitment, however, we may legitimately examine the unbeliever’s presuppositions and tell him our evaluation of them, how they look from our point of view. . . . This criticism is “external” in the sense of being based on criteria outside the unbeliever’s own system of thought. . . . But it can become “internal” in another sense, when we ask the unbeliever how, even from his own point of view, he is able to account for the intelligibility of the world. . . . Our criticism will never be purely internal, purely from the unbeliever’s point of view; it will always be external in the sense that it is determined by the Christian point of view. Otherwise, we would be . . . drowning with the one we would rescue.” (ibid., 322)
Transcendental. Those familiar with Immanuel *Kant understand a *transcendental argument.
Van Til also affirmed that “the method of implication may also be called a transcendental method. ... A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such a fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” The transcendental argument seeks a foundational epistemology for knowledge. Van Til observes that this always presupposes that a foundation does, in fact, exist (Survey of Christian Epistemology, 10, 11).
Robert Knudsen, in his essay “Progressive and Regressive Tendencies in Christian Apologetics” (in Jerusalem and Athens), noted that the transcendental method gained ascendancy after David *Hume undermined the traditional methodology. Greg Bahnsen defended the transcendental method in his essay “The Reformation of Christian Apologetics” (in North, Foundations of Christian Scholarship, 191-239). However, Van Til never really spelled out how his transcendental argument actually works. Nonetheless, he claimed that “the only argument for an absolute God that holds water is a transcendental argument” (Defense of the Faith, 11 ,see Schaeffer, Francis on his use of the transcendental argument).
Van Til said that both inductive and deductive arguments are bound to the universe. “In either case there is no more than an infinite regression.” It is always possible to ask, “If God made the universe, who made God?” Yet unless there were an absolute God, the very questions and doubts of the skeptic would have no meaning. At some point every epistemological base depends on the existence of God. The transcendental argument seeks to discover that presupposed foundation (Survey of Christian Epistemology, 11). Thus, transcendentalism and presuppositionalism are one. For, according to Van Til, it is transcendentally necessary to presuppose a Triune God (see Trinity) revealed in Holy Scripture in order to make any sense of the world. Without this necessary presupposition, no thought or meaning is possible.
The reductio ad absurdum method. Frame recognized three elements in this method: First, it seeks to show that all intelligibility depends on, or presupposes, Christian theism Second, it is indirect rather than direct, negative rather than positive, essentially a reductio ad absurdum. Third, each participant in the discussion must be able to put on the opposing position for the sake of argument to see how it works (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 314-15). According to Frame, “The unbeliever supplies the premises of the indirect argument, the premises which the believer then reduces to absurdity” (ibid., 315). Once the unbeliever supplies the premise of the indirect argument, the believer shows that it entails the rational-irrationalist dialectic. The unbeliever’s system inevitably applies purely abstract laws to irrational facts. Rational thought is impossible.
Two things happen in the use of the method: The Christian assumes the correctness of the opposing method, then runs it to its final implications to show that its “facts” are not facts and “laws” are not laws. The non-Christian is asked to assume the Christian position for argument’s sake and is shown that only these “facts” and “laws” appear intelligible” {Defense of the Faith, 100-101). It is pointed out that “the non-Christian himself refutes his own irrationalism, for despite his philosophy he continues to live as if the world were a rational place. Thus, the unbeliever’s own mind is part of God’s revelation, witnessing against his irrationalist defense” (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 322).
Key Concepts. An understanding of Van Til’s approach depends on the meaning of certain key concepts.
God’s Sovereignty. Van Til is first and foremost a Reformed theologian. Apart from God’s sovereign control of the universe and his revelation to us we would know absolutely nothing. Facts and laws are what they are because of God’s plan. God’s decree “is the final and exclusively determining power of whatsoever comes to pass.” It is the source {Defense of the Faith, 11; Christian Apologetics, 11; Introduction to Systematic Theology, 247).
Common Ground. Since all truth is God’s and nothing makes sense apart from him, there is no common intellectual epistemological foundationto share with unbelievers. In place of that foundation we set the self-attesting, self-explanatory Christ of Scripture. We no longer appeal to common ground but to the real common ground that every human being is an image-bearer who is doing business with God at some level.
Brute Facts. A “brute fact” is a fact that is meaningless because it is uninterpreted by God. It represents a universe of pure chance. Brute facts assume human autonomy and take their starting point outside God’s sovereign revelation of himself. Van Til affirms that Christians should appeal to God-interpreted facts but never to brute facts {Christian-Theist Evidences, 51, 57; Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 180).
Because of his presuppositional starting point, it is sometimes wrongly assumed that Van Til does not believe in the validity of traditional *historical apologetics. He says, “I would engage in historical apologetics.” Historical investigation sooner or later will vindicate the truth of the Christian position. “But I would not talk endlessly about the facts and more facts without ever challenging the unbeliever’s philosophy of fact. A really fruitful historical apologetic argues that every fact is and must be such as proves the truth of the Christian position” {Christian Theory of Knowledge, 293). All facts must be interpreted within the framework of the presupposed Christian worldview revealed in the Bible, or they are tainted by their rejection of God’s revelation.
Human Depravity. As a result of Adam’s sin, the human race is radically depraved and so sees everything with a twisted perspective, a “jaundiced eye.” Being “dead” in sins, fallen human beings are unable to accurately “know” anything in its context of reality until the Holy Spirit opens their eyes in the process of salvation. With John *Calvin, Van Til balances a recognition of God’s common grace to the unbeliever with a view that sin vitiates the unbeliever’s mind. Even the most learned non-Christian scientist cannot truly understand reality (Defense of the Faith, chap. 15). “The natural man cannot will to do God’s will. He cannot even know what is good” (ibid., 54). The noetic effects of sin are total and devastating.
Analogy and Paradox. Even a regenerate mind only knows God’s knowledge by analogy. At no point is our knowledge univocal with God’s. Whenever the creature attempts to understand divine reality, it runs into “paradoxes” or apparent contradictions. Van Til argues that “since God is not fully comprehensible to us we are bound to come into what seems to be contradiction in all our knowledge. Our knowledge is analogical and therefore must be paradoxical” {Defense of the Faith, 61). God is so sovereignly transcendent above human understanding that it would be blasphemous for us to suppose that we can know the way God knows. Even our supernaturally enlightened knowledge is only analogous to God’s. This view of the mind constantly keeps two ideas to the front: (1) the distinction between Creator and creature and (2) the sovereignty of Creator over creature (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 89). For these reasons our knowledge must be analogical. Our knowledge is derived from the original knowledge in God’s thinking. The human must attempt to think God’s thoughts after him “But this means that he must, in seeking to form his own system, constantly be subject to the authority of God’s system to the extent that this is revealed to him” {Christian Theory of Knowledge, 16).
Evaluation. Positive Contributions. Few apologists have more forthrightly and courageously stressed the sovereignty of God than has Van Til. Unless God sovereignly wills to reveal himself, we would be in complete ignorance. Revelation, whether general or special, is the source of all truth.
While some apologetic systems give begrudging recognition to man’s finitude, few give explicit acknowledgment to human depravity and the inability associated with depravity. Sin does have an effect on the whole person, including the mind. Van Til saw this as clearly as has any apologist.
Van Til defended the formal laws of logic in principle and practice. He believed the laws of logic were the same for both the Creator and creatures. However, formally because of sin they are not understood or applied in the same way. He was not an irrationalist.
Van Til offered a strong argument for Christianity. He regarded it as “proof ’ and chided other views for weakening their defense to mere “probable” arguments.
It seems proper to acknowledge that there is validity to a transcendental approach. What is often described as a self-defeating argument is strikingly similar to Van Til’s approach. There are certain rationally necessary preconditions for meaning, and they do, as Van Til argued, demand that we posit the existence of a theistic God.
Van Til believed in historical evidence and even devoted a book, Christian-Theist Evidences, to it. Unlike fellow Reformed apologist (but personal antagonist) Gordon H. Clark, Van Til was not an empirical skeptic. He believed in the validity of historic evidence for Christianity, but only as understood from the presupposition of biblical revelation.
Also, unlike Clark, Van Til correctly saw that our knowledge of God is only analogous {see Analogy, Principle of). To believe otherwise is presumptuous, if not blasphemous. For finite beings can know only in a finite way. To affirm that they know infinitely, as does God, is to deify our knowledge.
Often overlooked by nonpresuppositionalists is the practical value of a presuppositional approach. Non-Christians do implicitly (and even unconsciously) presuppose the basic principles of a theistic worldview in order to make sense out of the world. Pointing this out debunks their worldview and invites them to consider the positive value of the Christian worldview. No doubt Schaeffer’s effectiveness in doing this is a result of his study under Van Til.
Negatives in Van Til’s Apologetics. Some criticisms of Van Til seem to be based on misunderstanding, but others appear to be valid.
Even staunch defenders such as John Frame, while defending the general validity of Van Til’s method, admit that he goes too far in demanding that all apologetic argument fit the one pattern (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 315). Frame correctly points out that one may need more traditional arguments to make Van Til’s overall argument work. “To show that a non-Christian view of motion and rest is unintelligible, we may find it necessary to use a theistic proof from motion like that of Aquinas. We would argue that if motion is to be intelligibly explained, God must exist” (ibid., 318).
Proving Van Til’s conclusion, writes Frame, requires a complex argument to show that intelligible communication presupposes biblical theism “A Van Tillian apologist would have to go into some detail in showing that intelligibility requires an equal ultimacy of one and many, and that such equal ultimacy in turn presupposes the ontological Trinity. . . . I believe that Van Til’s conclusions better described as a goal of apologetics. ... It is unrealistic to expect that all of Christian theism can be established in a single encounter, let alone in a single argument of syllogism” (ibid.).
Van Til wrongly assumes his view is a purely indirect (negative) approach. There is no clear demarcation between indirect and direct arguments. Most arguments can be put in either form Frame summarizes Van Til’s apologetic:
1. If God does not exist, the world is unintelligible.
2. God does not exist.
3. Therefore, the world is unintelligible (ibid., 318).
Since it is agreed that the world is intelligible, then God must exist. However, Frame points out that the same argument can be stated in a positive form:
1. If the world is intelligible, God exists.
2. The world is intelligible.
3. Therefore, God exists (ibid.).
Van Til’s protests to the contrary, he cannot avoid giving a positive apologetic argument. This being the case, much of Van Til’s steam against classical apologetics evaporates.
Van Til misunderstands the traditional method of apologetics, so wrongly criticizes it for views very similar to his own. Frame says he questions whether transcendental reasoning is so very different from traditional reasoning, especially since traditional arguments may be needed to flesh out this approach (ibid., 45). Frame is insightful in noting that revelational presuppositionalismis strikingly similar to Thomistic approaches. Aquinas would agree with Van Til:
1. that in the realm of being (metaphysics), logic is dependent on God and not God on logic (Summa contra Gentiles, 1.7; 3.47; la. 105, 3).
2. that the existence of God is ontologically necessary {Summa Theologica, la. 2, 3).
3. that without God nothing could be either known or proven true (ibid., la. 16, 1-8; la2ae.
109, 1).
4. that the basis for Christian truth is neither reason nor experience but the authority of God expressed in Scripture {On Truth, 14.8-9; Summa contra Gentiles, 2a2ae. 2, 10; On the Trinity, 2.1, ad).
5. that depraved natural humanity willfully represses the revelation of God in nature {Summa contra Gentiles, la2ae. 77, 4; 83, 3; 84, 2; cf. Ia2ae. 109, 1-10).
Van Til complains that traditional apologetics compromises certainty about God. He seeks absolutely certain proof for Christian theism {Defense of the Faith, 103-4). Yet “Van Til himself admits that our apologetic argument may not be adequate to establish that certain conclusion,” writes Frame. “If the argument is never stated adequately enough to justify the certainty of its conclusions, then on what basis may the apologists claim certainty for his argument?” (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 277). Van Til overstates the case when he appears to insist that every argument should be certain {see Certainty/Certitude). The evidence is no less cogent in an argument for high probability (ibid., 279).
Van Til was no Thomist in disguise, but he both knew less about Aquinas and was far closer to Thomist thought than he realized. One basic difference between Van Til and Aquinas is that, while they both agree ontologically that all truth depends on God, Van Til fails to fully appreciate that finite man must ask epistemologically how we knows this. In this he confuses the order of being and the order of knowing.
Either there is a rational basis for knowing or there is not. But one cannot beg the question and merely presuppose the theistic God. Presuppositions cannot be arbitrary. If we argue, as Van Til implied that we should, that Christian theism is a rationally necessary position, it is difficult to see on what rational grounds one could criticize Aquinas for providing rational support for it. How does Van Til know the Christian position is true? If Van Til answered, as he seems to in his writings, “Because it is the only truly rational view,” perhaps Aquinas would reply, “That is what I believe. Welcome, dear brother, to the bi-millennial club of rational theists.”
Van Til goes farther than most Reformed theologians, who themselves take a stronger stance than other Protestant theologies, regarding the noetic effects of radical depravity. Even some of Van TiFs strongest defenders admit an overstatement in his formulation. Speaking of Van TiFs assertion that “all unbelievers, interpretive activity results in false conclusions,” Frame responds that by implication Van Til denies commongrace itself (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 194). He adds, “The extreme antithetical formulations [of Van Til] are inadequate without considerable qualification.”
This understanding asserts that the unbeliever literally never makes a correct statement. Even the answer to a mathematical problem is incorrect in that it represents a false view of how the universe works mathematically. Frame finds it simplistic to hold that the noetic effects of sin amount to a propositional falsification of the unbeliever’s every utterance (ibid., 211).
Van Til also suggests that human depravity shows itself as much or more in the discrete statements the unbeliever makes than in life direction. And there is a failure to convey that the unbeliever’s very denial of truth in some respects affirms truth (ibid., 207).
Indeed, Van Til himself offers statements inconsistent with his own antithesis between the knowledge of believers and unbelievers. He urges “that we present the message and evidence for the Christian position as clearly as possible, knowing that because man is what the Christian says he is, the non-Christian will be able to understand in an intellectual sense the issues involved” (“My Credo”). Van Til even says of unbelievers, “He has within himself the knowledge of God by virtue of his creation in the image of God.” But Van Til hastens to say in the very next sentence, “But this idea of God is suppressed by his false principle, the principle of autonomy” (Defense of the Faith, 170). This principle is the “jaundiced eye” by which all knowing is distorted and false. But how can he understand the issues even in an intellectual sense if there is no common facts, ground, or knowledge of any kind—if he sees all with a jaundiced eye?
Van Til saw this tension in his own view. He speaks of it as a “difficult point.” “We cannot give any wholly satisfactory account of the situation as it actually obtains” (Introduction to Systematic Theology, 15). If fallen human beings really see everything with a “jaundiced eye,” so that they cannot even understand the truth of general revelation or of the gospel, they are not morally accountable. But Scripture says they are “without excuse” (Rom. 1:19-20; 2:12-15). Indeed, Adam and Eve were “dead in trespasses and sin” (cf. Eph. 2:1) the instant they took of the forbidden fruit (Gen. 3:6; Rom. 5:12). Yet they heard and understood God when he spoke (Gen. 3:9-19).
A common mistake of Reformed presuppositionalism is to equate the figure of speech dead with the concept annihilated, a mistake that fortunately they do not make when speaking of the “second death” (Rev. 20:14). Death in Scripture is better understood in terms of separation, not annihilation. The prophet said, “Your sins have separated you from your God” (Isa. 59:2 KJV). Spiritual death is the lack of spiritual life; it is not the lack of human life, which involves both rational and volitional activity. Indeed, “dead” is not the only figure of speech used in the Bible to describe fallen humankind. Sickness, blindness, pollution, and lameness are also used. But none of these imply a person totally unable to understand God’s revelation. Many nonpresuppositional Reformed theologians, among them Jonathan *Edwards, B. B. *Warfield, John Gerstner, and R. C. Sproul, believe just as firmly in radical depravity without accepting this skewed view of the noetic effects of sin. Depravity can be understood as an inability to initiate or attain salvation without the grace of God.
In this same connection, Reformed presuppositionalists often misinterpret 1 Corinthians 2:14 to mean that unbelievers cannot even understand God’s truth before they are regenerated. Besides the obvious difficulty that they would have to be saved before they believe (just the opposite of what the Bible says in such texts as John 3:16, 36; Acts 16:31; and Rom. 5:1), this misreads the passage. Nor does it help to set up an order of events in salvation to claim the person being saved is regenerated before being justified, since one is placed in the kingdom of God by regeneration (John 3:3;
Titus 5:5). The Greek word for “receive” (dekomai) means “to welcome.” It does not mean they do not understand. They clearly perceive but do not willingly receive (Rom 1:19-20). As a consequence, they do not know truths by experience. A failure to understand these truths leads to a misunderstanding of the effects of sin on the unregenerate mind.
It is supposed by Van Til that a transcendental argument avoids the effects of depravity to which the traditional apologetic arguments are subject. But why should not sin lead the unbeliever to repress the force of a transcendental argument as much as any other reasoning or evidence (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 200)? Here the transcendental approach loses a touted advantage over classical apologetics.
This same point applies to Van Til’s rejection of a content-filled general *revelation, on which traditional theistic arguments are based. It is often alleged that the effects of sin on general revelation make a supernatural revelation necessary. But sin has equally vitiating effects on supernatural revelation as well, as is evidenced by all the Christian denominations, sects, and cults who claim the same supernatural revelation but interpret it in radically different ways. Thus, presupposing a starting point in Holy Scripture does not in itself offer any advantage over beginning in general revelation, as classical apologetics do. The noetic effects of sin do not vanish simply because one turns his head from nature to the Bible.
Van Til’s view of the Trinity involved two apparently opposing propositions: God is one person; God is three persons. He never clearly differentiates between the two senses of the tQxmperson.
Van Til’s doctrine of the Trinity “begins with an affirmation of the ancient creeds and the Reformed confessions” (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 63). However, Van Til goes onto say that “we therefore claim that we have not asserted unity and trinity of exactly the same thing. Yet this is not the whole truth of the matter. We do assert that God, that is, the whole Godhead is one person” {Introduction to Systematic Theology, 229). So “God is not simply a unity of persons; he is a person” (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 65).
This is a theological move that no orthodox creed, confession, or major church father ever took before. GordonH. Clark’s disciple, John Robbins, went so far as to call it “a radical new heresy” (Robbins, 20). The more commonobjection, however, is that it violates the law of noncontradiction. Defenders point out that Van Til never calls the doctrine of the Trinity “contradictory” but rather finds it “apparently contradictory” {Common Grace and the Gospel, 9). Nor does he deny the traditional view that God is one in essence and three in person; he says it “is not the whole truth of the matter.” He tries to supplement the traditional doctrine, not replace it (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 67). It still seems a bit presumptuous to hold that he discovered what nineteen centuries of theologians, creeds, and councils had failed to see. The question is not whether Van Til affirms the orthodox formula that God is one in essence and three in persons (with a distinct difference between person and essence). The controversy is that he also affirms God to be both three persons and yet also only one person (without offering a difference between person and persons).
His defenders claim that Clark and Robbins do not answer Van Til’s argument. “He is one ‘being,’ not three; the three partake of one ‘essence.’ Now the question becomes, is this one being personal or impersonal?” Van Til believed the historic formulation made the Father, Son, and Spirit individuals, but the divine essence, God, could only be regarded as an abstraction. This model could only be inadequate, for God is not an abstraction (ibid., 68).
However, the argument offered is a false dilemma. God is not either personal (in a singular sense) or impersonal. He is tripersonal. Hence, it is not necessary to conclude that the essence of God is impersonal because there are three persons in it. Being tripersonal is being personal. Frame asks the appropriate question: “How, then, do we relate the ‘one person’ to the ‘three persons’? Van Til asserts that ‘this is a mystery that is beyond our comprehension.’” Van Til does not say the two assertions are contradictory, but he does not appear to leave any options to contradiction.
The heart of Frame’s defense is that something can be both A and not-A if the two A’s have different senses. “The traditional language, ‘one in essence, three in person’ (which, again, Van Til does not reject), brings out more clearly, of course, that the oneness and the threeness are in different respects. But the formulation ‘one person and three persons’ does not deny that difference of respect” (ibid., 69).
This leads to Frame’s last connected point. Obviously, there is a difference between the sense of person as applied to the oneness of God and the sense of persons as applied to the three members of the Trinity. For one thing, the Father is the begetter, the Son is begotten, and the Spirit is the one who proceeds from both Father and Son. The Godhead as a unity is not any of those three roles.
Neither Van Til nor I would claim to be able to state, precisely and exhaustively, the differences between God’s essence and the individual persons of the Godhead. Doubtless the Clarkite critics of Van Til will find this a damaging admission, for they insist that all theological statements be perfectly precise. Never mind that Scripture itself often fails to be precise about the mysteries of the faith. But the creedal tradition, too, fails to give a “precise” account of the relations between God’s “essence” and his “persons.”
Frame at this point argues, regarding the confessions, which sort out the biblical conception of the Trinity, that “ousia and hypostasis can be interchangeable. They can mean one substance and three substances.”
While Van Til is willing to admit that he cannot really specify any difference in meaning between the two usages of the term person, yet he criticizes non-Christian views for their contradictions. He says one view “will not lead to greater knowledge, but only to skepticism about the very possibility of truth” (ibid. 77). That very thing could be said of Van Til’s view.
Van Til does not overlook the fact that he has not provided a real difference in the definition of the term person as used of “one person” and “three persons.” He admits that “we may not always be able to show how two concepts can logically coexist” (ibid., 71). But unless a difference can be shown, Van Til has not avoided the charge of contradiction. For one cannot have both three and only one of the same subject (person) at the same time.
Van Til denies “that we can prove to men that we are not asserting anything that they ought to consider irrational, inasmuch as we say that God is one in essence and three in persons.” But if we cannot do this, what grounds do we have for objecting when unbelievers cannot do the same for their view? Indeed, the whole transcendental method depends on being able to show that the unbeliever’s view is reducible to the logically contradictory.
Van Til claims, “I do not maintain that Christians operate according to new laws of thought any more than that they have new eyes or noses” (Defense of the Faith, 296). This claim notwithstanding, Van Til’s “laws of thought” are not really the same for believers. There is only a formal identity. There is no real point of contact that is the same for God and humanity. But this leads to skepticism about God, since there is no point of actual identity between our knowledge and his. It is transcendentally necessary to affirm such a content-filled point of identity.
Granting that a transcendental argument is valid, it does not follow that Van Til’s form of it is valid. Certainly, as Van Til argues, it is necessary to posit a God to make sense out of the world. However, he has not shown that it is necessary to postulate a Triune God. This is true whether or not one accepts his argument that only the Trinity solves the problem of the one and many. Even granting for the sake of argument that there must be more than one person in the Godhead if the world is to make sense, this does not mandate that there are three persons. This they simply believe from Scripture. The same is true of other aspects of Christianity, such as the plan of salvation. Nowhere does Van Til demonstrate this is a transcendentally necessary precondition for making sense out of our world. Thus, there are fideistic elements in Van Til’s form of presuppositionalism It is interesting to note that even Van Til’s defenders admit, “I believe that much of Van Til’s presuppositionalism should be understood as an appeal to the heart rather than as a straightforward apologetic method” (Frame, Cornelius Van Til, 320).
Sources
T. Aquinas, On the Trinity.
--, On Truth.
--, Summa contra Gentiles.
G. Bahnsen, By This Standard.
J. DeBoer et at, “Professor Van Til’s Apologetics.”
J. M. Frame, Cornelius Van Til.
, “The Problem of Theological Paradox.”
N. L. Geisler, Christian Apologetics.
S. Hackett, The Resurrection of Theism.
F. Howe, Challenge and Response.
R. Knudsen, "Progressive and Regressive Tendencies in Christian Apologetics.”
D. E. Kucharsky, "At the Beginning, God.”
G. R. Lewis, Testing Christianity's Truth Claims.
G. North, Foundations of Christian Scholarship.
S. Oliphant, The Consistency of Van Til's Methodology.
J. W. Robbins, Cornelius Van Til.
C. Van Til, Christian Apologetics.
--, Christian-Theistic Evidences.
--, Christian Theory of Knowledge.
--, Common Grace and the Gospel.
--, The Defense of the Faith.
--, The Great Debate Today.
--, interview in Christianity Today.
--,An Introduction to Systematic Theology.
--, Introduction to The Inspiration and Authority of the Bible, by B. B. Warfield.
--, "My Credo.”
--, "Nature and Scripture.”
--,A Survey of Christian Epistemology.
B. B. Warfield, The Inspiration and Authority of the Bible.
W. White Jr., Van Til Defender of the Faith.
Vedanta. See Hinduism, Vedanta.
Verifiability, Principle of. See Ayer, A. J.
Verification, Kinds of. Verification has to do with how to test the meaning or truth of a claim Out of the school of *logical positivism grew the verification principle. Such proponents as A. J. *Ayer, following David *Hume, originally claimed that for a statement to be meaningful it had to be either true by definition or else empirically verifiable through one or more of the senses. This proved too narrow, since on this ground the principle of empirical verifiability was not itself empirically verifiable. It too was meaningless.
In the wake of the death of strict verifiability grew a broadening of the principle to include other kinds of verification—experiential, historical, and eschatological. Most philosophers agreed that there had to be specific conditions under which one could know if a statement was meaningful or true. Antony *Flew, following John Wisdom’s “invisible gardener” parable, argued that unless there are criteria by which one could know if something is false, one cannot know it is true. Unless one can specify some conditions) by which a claim could be falsified, there is no way to verify it either. Something has to be able to count against a proposition if evidence is to count for it. This means that unless a theist can specify conditions under which we could know that God does not exist, there is no ground on which to claim that he does exist.
Types of Verification. Attempts to meet the challenge of verification of a truth claim fall into three categories, past, present, and future. Those that offer criteria for the present can be divided into theistic proofs and experiential tests.
Historical Verification. Among Christian apologists, John W. Montgomery and Gary Habermas argue that the Christian truth claims can be verified from history by way of the resurrection of Christ (see Resurrection, Evidence for). This view is called historical apologetics or historical verification
Present Verification. Those who seek some sort of verification in the present fall into the broad categories of rational and experiential. The former offer traditional theistic proofs as verification. Traditional theists note that this is precisely what arguments for and against God’s existence do (see God, Evidence for). If one could offer a disproof of God, then they could falsify the claim of theism (see God, Alleged Disproofs of). Likewise, a proof for God can verify his existence. Anything short of a full proof still tends to verify or falsify.
Experiential tests can be special or general. The special ones are often called mystical and deal with unique religious experiences. The latter deal with experiences available to all. Some apologists offer nonmystical experiential tests for the truthfulness of religious statements. Ian Ramsey spoke of the empirical fit of statements that evoke an experience of God (see Ramsey). Friedrich *Schleiermacher spoke of a feeling of absolute dependence. Paul Tillich’s sense of ultimate commitment fits this category. Some have developed an argument from religious experience as a test for their claims about God. Elton *Trueblood is an evangelical who has tried this.
Eschatological Tests. Eschatology (Gk. eschatos, “last things”) deals with what will happen in the end. Those coming from the empirical traditions tried other kinds of verification-falsification. John *Hick offered the principle of eschatological verification (Hick, 252-74). Claims for immortality can be verified if, for example, we consciously observe our own funerals. We can know God exists after death if we have an experience of transcendent rapture and bliss that brings ultimate fulfillment.
Evaluation. Since other forms of verification are discussed as noted above, eschatological verification will be treated here. On the positive side, future verification does seem to meet the minimal criteria for meaning and truth. It does provide specific conditions under which we could know if certain religious claims are true.
On the other hand, the knowledge will be too late for us to do anything with it. Atheists (see Atheism) bank on the nonexistence of God and hell. If the atheist wakes up after death to find that he or she was in error on both counts, it will be too late. That was the point of Pascal’s wager (see Pascal, Blaise). Even for the theist it could be too late. We want to know now whether it is worth sacrificing all for God and which God is the true one. Why suffer for Christ, even to the point of death, without evidence that Christianity is true (cf. 2 Cor. 11:22-28; 2 Tim 3:12)? It might be deemed better to avoid all the misery and have a pleasure-filled life now.