Friday, June 16, 2023

Some Notes from Thomas P. Scheck on Origen's Doctrine of Justification

  

Disregard for what is undoubtedly Origen’s greatest exegetical achievement has resulted in imbalanced and misleading depictions of his thought. Entire monographs on Origen have been written with virtually no engagement with his Commentary. Yet the Commentary is one of Origen’s longest and most mature works. It is the only commentary of Origen that we posses in a coherent form from beginning to end. His work is characterized by its opposition to Gnostic, i.e., predestinarian, interpretations of Paul. Above all Origen defends Paul against the “doctrine of natures,” i.e., the belief that all human beings are born with unalterable natures, either good or evil, and thus bound for either salvation or damnation, and that no conduct of theirs during this life can alter their destiny. Origen successfully refutes this teaching, claiming a genuine freedom of will always abides in rational beings.

 

Provoked in part by Marcion’s repudiation of the OT and desecration of the New, Origen’s emphasizes the unity and integrity of the whole Christian canon. He also stresses the harmony between the Law and Gospel. The contrast between Origen’s interpretive categories and those of modern, chiefly Protestant, interpreters is obvious. This may be in part due to Origen’s failure to apprehend correctly some aspects of Paul’s thought. What is undeniable is that there are real and apparent similarities between certain Protestant theological formulae, especially those of Calvinism and Lutheranism, and the assertions of Gnostic and Marcionite exegesis. E. Molland has observed:

 

In all the works of Origen there is hardly a passage where he conceives of the relation of the Law and Gospel in the Pauline terms of GK [law] and GK [grace], the role of the Law being to convince mankind of sin and bring all men under the judgment of God, whereas redemption comes by Grace through the Gospel. Of this idea, which is so central in theological thinkers like Marion and Luther and has determined their whole conception of the Gospel, there are but very faint traces in Origen. . . . Origen thus conceives of the difference and contradiction of the Law and the Gospel in quite other terms than those of judgment and grace, viz., in the terms of imperfect and perfect religion. (E. Mollland, The Conception of the Gospel in Alexandrian Theology [Oslo: I kommisjon hos. J. Dybwad, 1938[, p. 121)

 

This passage illustrates the chasm standing between Origen’s teaching and Protestant theology, especially the Lutheran antithesis between Grace and Law. Another point of divergence is Origen’s repudiation of the natural predestinarian doctrine of his Gnostic opponents, a doctrine which seems to resemble that of the double-predestinarianism of Calvinism. (Thomas P. Scheck in Origen, Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Books 1-5 [trans. Thomas P. Scheck; The Fathers of the Church 103; Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2001], 22-23)

 

Elsewhere, Sheck notes that:

 

To Origen, justification is more than a remission and more than a renewal. It is the reception of Christ himself, our justice (1 Cor 1.30) who makes us just. It begins with a bestowal of forgiveness of past sins that takes place at the moment of faith and baptism. It it is identical with the process of sanctification so that it can increase, decrease, or be repudiated through negligence. (Ibid., 48)

 

For the above, 9.3.4 is referenced. Here it is in Scheck’s translation:

 

(4) In light, however, of his statement that grace is given “for that which benefits,” it can also come to pass that even if the measure of faith in someone is great enough to merit receiving a higher grace, if the Holy Spirit, when he looks into the future, judges that it will not benefit the recipient, he inevitably apportions it to each one as he wills and as is beneficial. After all, we observe that many have received the grace of teaching or exhorting the people and, having become puffed up because of this and having turned to arrogance, have fallen into the judgment of the devil. Others have indeed received grace but have ruined it through the negligence of their mind and the laziness of their life. It was from this that the man who had received the denarius and wrapped it in a piece of cloth did not want anything to be earned from it. It was for this reason, after all, that the Apostle also writes, saying to his most beloved son, “Do not neglect the grace that is in you.” He knows that grace can be lost through negligence. But in regard to what he said, “according to the rule, or measure, of faith,” I think I have already adequately explained above which is the faith that is demanded from us and which is given by God through grace according to what the same Apostle says, “to others, faith by the same Spirit”; and again, as the apostles elsewhere say to the Lord, “Increase our faith”; that the faith that would hope and believe and trust without any doubting is indeed in us; but the rule of that faith and the knowledge and perfect understanding of what we believe is given by God. (Thomas P. Scheck in Origen, Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Books 6-10 [trans. Thomas P. Scheck; The Fathers of the Church 104; Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2002], 206-7)

 

Further Reading:

 

Thomas P. Scheck, Origen and the History of Justification: The Legacy of Origen's Commentary on Romans

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