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The Reformed Doctrine of Predestinationby Loraine Boettner |
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Chapter XXV: Predestination In The Physical World
1. The Uniformity
of Natural Law. 2. Comments by
Noted Scientists and Theologians. 1. THE UNIFORMITY OF NATURAL LAW
As far as the material universe apart from mind is concerned we have no
trouble at all to believe in absolute Predestination. The course of events
which would follow was, in a very strict sense, immutably predetermined when
God created the world and implanted the natural laws of gravity, light, magnetism,
chemical affinity, electrical phenomena, etc. Apart from the interference
of mind or miracle, the course of nature is uniform and predictable. This
has not only been admitted but dogmatically held and asserted by many of
the greatest scientists. The atoms follow their exactly prescribed courses.The
material objects we handle are governed by fixed laws. If we have accurate
knowledge of all the factors involved, we can determine exactly what will
be the effect of a falling stone, an explosion, or an earthquake. The telescope
reveals to us millions of distant fiery suns, each of which follows an exact,
predetermined course, and their positions can be predicted for thousands
of years to come. Within the solar
system the planets and satellites swing Astronomers tell
us that the same principles which govern in our solar
system are also found in the millions of From the law of
gravitation we learn that every material object in the universe attracts every
other material object with a force which is directly proportional to their
masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their
centers. Hence every grain of sand in the desert or on the sea-shore is linked
up with every sun in the universe. The sluggish earth mounts upward to meet the
falling snowflake. The microscope reveals marvels just as wonderful as those
revealed by the telescope. God's providence extends to the atoms as well as to
the stars and each one exerts its particular influence, small but exact.
Everywhere there is perfect order and God has slighted His work nowhere. 2. COMMENTS BY NOTED SCIENTISTS AND THEOLOGIANS Huxley once said
that if man had possessed exact knowledge of natural laws before the rise of
plants and animals on the earth, he could have predicted not only the
geographical contour and climate of a given region, but also the exact flora and
fauna which would have been found there, —
arising, as he supposed, through the spontaneous generation of life from
non-living matter, —
and while we do not accept his extreme statement about the origin of life, this,
nevertheless, gives us some idea of the uniformity that a great scientist
expects to find in the laws of nature. The writer was
once in a discussion group conducted by Dr. H. N. Russell, head of the
Department of Astronomy in Princeton University, and one of the outstanding
astronomers of our time, in which Dr. Russell declared that apart from the
influence of mind in the world he believed in an absolute predestination made
effective through the fixed laws of nature. "The uniformity
of the laws of nature," says Dr. Charles Hodge, "is a constant revelation of the
immutability of God. They are now what they were at the beginning of time, and
they are the same in every part of the universe. No less stable are the laws
which regulate the operations of the reason and conscience." And again he says:
"As in all these lower departments of His work, God acts according to a
preconceived plan. It is not to be supposed that in the higher sphere of His
operations, which concern the destiny of men, everything would be left to chance
and allowed to take its undetermined course to an undetermined end. We
accordingly find that the Scriptures distinctly assert in reference to the
dispensations of grace not only that God sees the end from the beginning, but
that He works all things according to the counsel of His will, or, according to
His eternal purpose." 1 Dr. Abraham
Kuyper, who was admittedly one of the outstanding theologians of the last
century, tells us: "It is a fact that the more thorough development of science
in our age has almost unanimously decided in favor of Calvinism with regard to
the antithesis between the unity and stability of God's decree, which Calvinism
professes, and the superficiality and looseness, which the Arminians preferred.
The systems of the great philosophers are, almost to one, in favor of unity and
stability." He goes on to say that these systems "clearly demonstrate that the
development of science in our age presupposes a cosmos which does not fall a
prey to the freaks of chance, but exists and develops from one principle,
according to a firm order, aiming at one fixed plan. This is a claim which is,
as it clearly appears, diametrically opposed to Arminianism, and in complete
harmony with Calvinistic belief, that there is one supreme will in God, the
cause of all existing things, subjecting them to ordinances and directing them
towards a pre-established plan." And again, he asks, What does the doctrine of
foreordination mean except that "the entire cosmos, instead of being a plaything
of caprice and chance, obeys law and order, and that there exists a firm will
which carries out its design both in nature and in history?" 3. THE CALVINISTIC SYSTEM ALONE HARMONIZES WITH The Calvinistic
world- and life-view, which so emphasizes Without faith in
the unity, stability, and order of things such as that to which Predestination
leads us, it is impossible for Science to go beyond mere conjectures. Science is
based on faith in the organic inter-connection or unity of the universe, a firm
conviction that our entire lives must be under the sway of laws or principles
established by some extra-mundane Power or Creator. The more we learn about
Science the more clearly do we see the unity which underlies it all. And when we
come to
study History we find that it is a "chain of events." Just as every grain of
sand is related to every sun in the universe, so every event has its exact and
necessary place in the unfolding of History. All of us remember comparatively
insignificant events which have
This four-fold
argument of Science, Philosophy, History, and sacred Scriptures is not to be
taken lightly. In Science, Philosophy, and History the doctrine is reduced to
the cold severity of impersonal force. But when the radiant light of the
glorious Gospel is thrown upon this, showing that the racial choices, the
personal elections, the divine calls, are made by sovereign grace and not simply
by sovereign will, we see that God's eternal purposes are in favor of man and
not against him; and the heart finds rest and comfort in the fact that God's
love and mercy are as tender as His purposes are strong.
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