2015年12月24日星期四

歷史神學系列〈2〉:再思亞他那修在亞流爭論中的論據 Rethinking of Athanasius's Arguments in Arian Controversy

湃  恩

     筆者在本文旨在從亞流的兩封書信:《亞流致尼哥米底亞的優西比烏(Arius’s Letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia《亞流致亞歷山大的亞歷山大(Arius’s Letter to Alexander of Alexandria,以及亞他那修駁亞流四論文(Four Discourses Against the Arians的卷一和卷三,論證在第四世紀的亞流爭論中,亞他那修(AthanasiusAD 296-373)最大的關注乃是亞流AriusAD 256-336的異端教訓,抹了在道成肉身中神性與人性的聯合,並含示了墮落的人類再沒法在神人聯合裡得著有效的救恩。亞他那修的論據乃是從當時的形而上論、認識論,以及更重要的是救恩論—即以在基督裡被神化theosis,作為在神經綸裡救恩的目標—來證明子基督的神性,以及子與父的關係。
In this essay, I argue according to Arius's Arius’s Letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia and Arius’s Letter to Alexander of Alexandria, and Athanasius's Four Discourses Against the Arians, that in the fourth century's Arian controversy, Athanasius's greatest concern to the Arians' heretic teaching is that there is no genuine union of divinity and humanity in the Incarnation of the Word, implying there is no efficacious salvation for the fallen human race from the God-man union. His arguments range from metaphysics, epistemology, and most importantly, soteriology - the thought of deification (theosis) in Christ as the goal of salvation in the economy of God, to demonstrate the divinity of Christ the Son, and his relationship with the Father.

亞流對神與基督的理解
Arians’ Understanding on God and Christ
亞流為著持守絕對一神論absolute monotheism,他堅稱唯有神是永地自存self-subsistent)、非受生(unbegotten)、不改變(unchangeable),以及沒有複數(plurality)。神為要創造世界,在時間和各世代之先,祂憑著祂的自由意志,藉著祂自己的「智慧」和「道」,創造子作為依賴的存有。在亞流的觀念中,子是與神自己截然不同的存有,子是可改變的(changeable),非永恆地存在(not eternally-existed),是受生的(begotten),並因而是有一個開始。正如他自己常說的話,「曾有一時,祂(子)並不存在。」子作為首生和完全的受造物,祂分享父的生命、存有和榮耀,祂所有的都是從父接受的。 子藉著在肉身的時完全順服父的旨意,被父高舉作為祂美德和自我改進的奬賞。祂被父收養,有分於父的恩典,而被稱作「神(god)」、「道」和「智慧」。如此,子就成了人類救恩的模型(pattern)。
In holding an absolute monotheism, Arian maintains that God alone is self-subsistent eternally, unbegotten, unchangeable, and without any plurality. To create the world, God, by his entirely free will, through his own "Wisdom" and "Word", creates the Son as a subsistent being who is wholly distinct from himself, before times and ages.[1] The Son in Arian's view is changeable, not eternally-existed, and thus was begotten and has a beginning. As he often said, "there once a time when he (the Son) was not". As the firstborn and perfect creature, the Son shares the Father's life, being, and glory, receiving all his things from the Father.[2] He, through fully obeying the Father's will in the flesh, was exalted as a reward for virtues and improvement, being called "god", "word" and "wisdom" by adoption and participation of grace.[3] As such, the Son's pattern acted as a salvation for all humankind.
亞他那修的反駁
Athanasius's Refutation

形而上論中子與父的關係
Relationship between Son and Father on Metaphysics
首先,因著亞流派認為父是「非起始」(unoriginated)的,而子是「有起始的」(originated),他們認為將子的神性等同父的神性即否認了父的非起始性。亞他那修指出亞流跟隨了當代希哲學的邏輯,亞流意味著父必定是唯一的創造者,萬物包括子都是起始於祂。因此,亞流推斷子必定是受造物,是在父的本質以外的。 亞他那修反駁指出,若如亞流所說,作為受造物的子,能因有分恩典而被稱作「神」,那麼,我們能否因所有受造物有分於神的恩典,而稱它們都為「神」?若子是次神,則有為何沒有第三、第四、第一百萬的神? 故此,對亞他那修來說,「亞流派不是帶來泛神論,就是無神論。」
To begin with, Arians say that since the Father is "unoriginated" while the Son is "originate", equaling the Father and the Son is to deny the "unoriginality" of the Father. Athanasius pointed out that following the logic of the Greek philosophy, Arius infers that the Father must be the only Creator who originates all things, including the Son. Thus, the Son must be a creature, external from the Father's substance.[4] Athanasius argues that if the Son is a creature we call "God" only by participation, as Arians said, can we call all creatures "God" as all creatures are participating in the grace of God? Or if the Son is a second God, why not a third, fourth, millionth?[5] Thus, for Athanasius, "The Ario-maiacs with reason incur the charge of polytheism or else of atheism."[6]

憑著全然有分互相内在,而與神是一
Co-inhering being One God by wholly participation
        亞他那修認為基督取得和持守祂的兒子名分的方式,乃是在本質上不同於我們的方式。祂作為子,並非如我們這些受造物般憑著收養或恩典,外在並依賴地有分於父,而是憑著本質全然地有分於父。 在《駁亞流四論文》卷三,亞他那修引入「互相内在」(coinherence)這概念來說明這點。父和子各是完整和完全的神。正如約翰福音1417章所示,祂們互相內在彼此裡面,故祂們的本質是一並相同。因為子是在父裡面,祂所有的就是父所有。子作為父自己的形像和兒子,子與父乃是同一位神。
    Athanasius suggests the way which Christ gains and holds his Sonship is essentially different from ours. He is not participating in the Father by adoption or grace, as creatures do, externally and dependently,[7] but is "wholly participating" in the Father by nature, even that what is partaken from the Father, is the Son.[8] In Book 3, Athanasius introduces the concept of the coinherence to illustrate this point. The Father and the Son, each whole and perfect God, are in each other as shown in the Gospel of John 14-17, so their substance is one and the same.[9] Since the Son is in the Father, he has all that the Father has. Being Father's own Image and offspring, the Son and the Father are one God.[10]

子的不變性
Immutability of the Son
對於亞流所認為道是「可變的」,亞他那修反對這看法而反問:「怎能一位既是父的形像,而沒有像父的不變性?」, 並回應說:「因此,不變之神的形像必定也是不變的」,因為「子的存有和本質既是來自父,子也就如父自己一樣是不改變的。」故此,亞他那修總結,子是如父一樣不改變,因為祂分享父相同的本質。
Concerning the Arian statement whether the Word is "mutable", Athanasius objects to it by asking a rhetorical question "how can such a one be the Father’s Image, not having the likeness of His unalterableness?"[11] and replying "therefore the Image of the unalterable God must be unchangeable" because "the Son, being from the Father, and proper to His essence, is unchangeable and unalterable as the Father Himself."[12] 

子的可知性
Son's Knowability
為回應亞流的觀念,認為子對父缺乏完全的認識, 亞他那修回答為何子在肉身時看似對父的認識是無知的,他指出子的知識就是父的知識,然而為著門徒的益處,祂情願像人一樣不認識父。
In response to the Arian view that the Son lacks perfect knowledge to the Father,[13] Athanasius answered why the Son seemed irrogant to the Father when he was in the flesh, saying the knowledge of the Son is the knowledge of the Father, but for the profit of his disciples, he did not know as a man.[14]

對救恩的關切
Urgency to Salvation
亞流持守與亞他那修截然不同的救贖觀。他理解子乃是一個完美的受造物,祂在祂的生命和屬地職事裡,藉著順服完美地滿足了父的旨意,並被高舉為「神」,以作為「祂美德的賞賜」或「提昇」,因而成了人類提昇至神,被收養而取得兒子名分的模型和先鋒。亞他那修認為亞流這觀點,廢除了子成肉身使神自己與人性聯合的工作。他堅持除非道就是神自己親自成為肉身而來,否則我們仍是活在罪中。在他看來,不僅子的成肉身,連祂的降卑、受膏、受苦難、受死、被高舉等一切過程,都是為著我們的救恩,甚至是「代表我們」。亞他那修跟隨教會傳統的神化教導,指出子成肉身乃是為著人被神化這終極的救恩目標。只有祂是神自己才能使人神化成為神的眾子。然而,子在祂肉身裡取上人性時並沒有失去祂的神性。反之,因祂就是神自己,祂甚至能神化祂所取的肉身。 因此,對亞流派來說,因為看子是作為給人類道德的模型,故子必定是如墮落的人類般是受造物;但對亞他那修來說,因為看子是人類能憑有分恩典而成為神的拯救者,故子必定是本質上是神。
Arius holds a radically different soteriological point from Athanasius. He understood that as a perfect creature, the Son has perfectly fulfilled Father’s will through obedience in his life and earthly ministry, and exalted to be “god” as "a reward for his virtue" or “promotion”[15] , thus becoming the model and pioneer of men’s progress to God that man may be adopted and gain their Sonships. Athanasius considers this view as undoing the work of the Son’s incarnation in which God himself unified with humanity.[16] He insists that unless the Word is God coming to us in flesh, then we are still in our sins. He regards not only the Son's incarnation, his being humbled, anointed, suffering, death and exalted are also for our salvation and even “on our behalf”.[17] Athanasius, following the tradition church teaching of deification, argues that the Son’s incarnation is for human’s deification as the goal of salvation. Only he, being God, can deify man to be sons of God.[18] The Son, however, did not lose his divinity when taking up humanity in the flesh. Rather, because he is the very God, he even deified the flesh he took up.[19] Thus, to Arians, for acting a moral improvement model for men, the Son must be a creature as fallen men; while to Athanasius, for men to be saved unto the gods by participation in grace, the Son must be the true God by nature.
總結
Conclusion
總結來說,亞他那修乃是照著「信仰的規範」(the scope of faith), 即子基督是永恆的道、是父的道、光輝和智慧,成肉身來作我們的救主。[21] 亞他那修從形而上論、認識論和救贖論,論證子乃是在「創造-受造界線」中的創造者,祂有完全的神性。為了從亞流的誤用和誤解聖經語言中區別出來,亞他那修採用了當時哲學詞彙「同質」homoousios,並視唯有這詞才能足以描述聖經的觀念—子與父乃是本體上(ontologically)與父相同本質。
To sum up, the Son understood in the view of Athanasius is according to "the scope of faith"[20], that he is the Eternal Word, being the Father’s Word, and Radiance and Wisdom, made flesh becoming our Savior.[22] From the perspectives of metaphysics, epistemology and soteriology, Athanasius demonstrates that the Son is of the Creator in the Creator-creation distinction to have the perfect divinity, and in order to differentiate from Arians’ misusing and misinterpreting biblical languages, he employed the philosophical word homoousios and deems only this word was sufficiently enough to describe the biblical sense that the Son and the Father are ontologically the same substance.[23]

        有趣的是,亞流和亞他那修二人均是亞歷山大學派俄利根之屬靈遺產的繼承者。然而,亞他那修嘗試努力地遵循他先前教父的神學釋經,就是按照「信仰準則」(Rule of Faith),以基督作為神永恆救贖計劃oikonomia中心的釋經。儘管亞他那修採用了當時哲學的非聖經用語,他並沒有跟隨亞流採用當時的哲學思考路徑來詮釋聖經。反之,他乃是跟隨教會傳統,尤其是以救贖論的角度,來詮釋聖經。這教會傳統的救贖論,就是神為要使人成為神,祂親自成為了人。在亞他那修向亞流派的論據中,清楚顯示出救恩作為神化這觀念佔據他的神學思想一個首要且中心的位置。這觀念亦塑造了後期教會的神學發展,尤其是東方教會。筆者認為若要更完全地明白初期正統神學發展史,這點值得今日的更正教福音派注意,以重新發掘教父的神學釋經,以及神化的救贖觀。
Both Arius and Athanasius, interestingly, are the successors of Origen's spiritual inheritance. However, Athanasius was trying to keep in the Patristics' theological interpretation, which is Christocentric in the God's eternal salvation plan (oikonomia) according to the "Rule of Faith". I found that though taking the extra-biblical languages from philosophy, Athanasius did not interpret Scripture in that track as Arius did, but in the church tradition track, particularly the soteriological track, that God in order to make men God, he himself has to make man. In Athanasius's argument with the Arians, it is clearly shown that salvation as deification takes the primary and central position in his theological thought. This concept has also shaped the theological development of the latter church, particular the Eastern Church. I think it is worth the attention of today's evangelicals to rediscover Patristics' theological interpretation and especially, this traditional soteriological concept of deification in order to better understand the history of early orthodox theological development.



[1] Arius, "Arius’s Letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia", 4-5, in The Trinitarian Controversy, William G. Rusch trans. and ed. (U.S: Fortress Press, 1980), pp.29-30.
[2] Arius, "Arius’s Letter to Alexander of Alexandria", 3-5 in ibid., pp.31-32.
[3] Athanasius, NPNF2-04. Athanasius: Select Works and Letters, Four Discourses Against the Arians, 1.9: “(Arius said) And ‘Christ is not very God, but He, as others, was made God by participation; the Son has not exact knowledge of the Father, nor does the Word see the Father perfectly; and neither exactly understands nor knows the Father. He is not the very and only Word of the Father, but is in name only called Word and Wisdom, and is called by grace Son and Power. He is not unalterable, as the Father is, but alterable in nature, as the creatures.”
  1.38: "they say this of the Savior… of the mere grace given to Him, and for a Creator of His being according to essence, after the similitude of all others. And being such, as they maintain, it will be manifest further that He had not the name Son’ from the first, if so be it was the prize of works done and of that very same advance which He made when He became man, and took the form of the servant; but then, when, after becoming ‘obedient unto death,’ He was, as the text says, ‘highly exalted,’ and received that ‘Name’ as a grace, ‘that in the Name of Jesus every knee should bow.’ (translated by Philip Schaff and Henry Wace, 1891, from http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf204.html)
[4] Ibid., 1.31: " But if they still are satisfied with merely asking, ‘Is the Unoriginate one or two?’… they are like to say that the Unoriginate is the image of creatures; the end of which is a confusion of the whole subject, an equalling of things originated with the Unoriginate, and a denial of the Unoriginate by measuring Him with the works; and all to reduce the Son into their number (works)."
[5] Ibid., 3.16: " For they cannot see the One in the Other, because their natures and operations are foreign and distinct. And with such sentiments, they will certainly be going on to more gods, for this will be the essay of those who revolt from the One God.
[6] Ibid., 3.15: "…Rather then will the Ario-maniacs with reason incur the charge of polytheism or else of atheism, because they idly talk of the Son as external and a creature, and again the Spirit as from nothing. For either they will say that the Word is not God; or saying that He is God, because it is so written, but not proper to the Father’s Essence, they will introduce many because of their difference of kind (unless forsooth they shall dare to say that by participation only, He, as all things else, is called God."
[7] Ibid., 1.6: " Moreover he has dared to say, that ‘the Word is not the very God;’ ‘though He is called God, yet He is not very God,’ but ‘by participation of grace, He, as others, is God only in name.’ And, whereas all beings are foreign and different from God in essence, so too is ‘the Word alien and unlike in all things to the Father’s essence and propriety,’ but belongs to things originated and created, and is one of these."
[8] Ibid., 1.16: "Such thoughts then being evidently unseemly and untrue, we are driven to say that what is from the essence of the Father, and proper to Him, is entirely the Son; for it is all one to say that God is wholly participated, and that He begets…the Son Himself partakes of nothing, but what is partaken from the Father, is the Son…. For they cannot see the One in the Other, because their natures and operations are foreign and distinct. And with such sentiments, they will certainly be going on to more gods, for this will be the essay of those who revolt from the One God."
[9] Ibid., 3.3: "I in the Father and the Father in Me.’ For the Son is in the Father, as it is allowed us to know, because the whole Being of the Son is proper to the Father’s essence, as radiance from light, and stream from fountain; so that whoso sees the Son, sees what is proper to the Father, and knows that the Son’s Being, because from the Father, is therefore in the Father."
[10] Ibid., 3.1: "For He is Himself the Father’s Power and Wisdom, and by partaking of Him things originate are sanctified in the Spirit; but the Son Himself is not Son by participation, but is the Father’s own Offspring.
Ibid., 3.4: "but the nature is one; (for the offspring is not unlike31 its parent, for it is his image), and all that is the Father's, is the Son's. Wherefore neither is the Son another God, …and He and the Father are one in propriety and peculiarity of nature, and in the identity of the one Godhead".
[11] Ibid., 1.35: " For the Father is unalterable and unchangeable, and is always in the same state and the same; but if, as they hold, the Son is alterable, and not always the same, but of an ever-changing nature, how can such a one be the Father’s Image, not having the likeness of His unalterableness?"
[12] Ibid., 1.36: " Therefore the Image of the unalterable God must be unchangeable; for ‘Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever.’… And with reason; for things originate, being from nothing, and not being before their origination, because, in truth, they come to be after not being, have a nature which is changeable; but the Son, being from the Father, and proper to His essence, is unchangeable and unalterable as the Father Himself."
[13] Ibid., 1.6: "…he(Arius) has stated in his Thalia, that ‘even to the Son the Father is invisible,’ and ‘the Word cannot perfectly and exactly either see or know His own Father;’ but even what He knows and what He sees, He knows and sees ‘in proportion to His own measure,’ as we also know according to our own power. For the Son, too, he says, not only knows not the Father exactly, for He fails in comprehension, but ‘He knows not even His own essence."
[14] Ibid., 3.49: "the Son then did know, as being the Word; for He implied this in what He said,—‘I know but it is not for you to know;’ for it was for your sakes that sitting also on the mount I said according to the flesh, ‘No, not the Son knoweth,’ for the profit of you and all."
[15] Ibid., 1.37: “For if He received what He had as a reward of His purpose, and would not have had it, unless He had needed it, and had His work to shew for it, then having gained it from virtue and promotion, with reason had He ‘therefore’ been called Son and God, without being very Son.”.
  Ibid., 1.40: “And in vain do the Arians lay stress upon the conjunction ‘wherefore,’ because Paul has said, ‘Wherefore, hath God highly exalted Him.’ For in saying this he did not imply any prize of virtue, nor promotion from advance…”
  See more “reward of virtue”, “advancement” or “promotion” on 1.36, 1.38, 1.39, 1.40, 1.44, 1.47, 1.49, etc.
[16] Ibid., 3.32: “More clearly however and indisputably than all reasoning does what was said by the Archangel to the Bearer of God herself, shew the oneness of the Divine Word and Man. For he says, ‘The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the Power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that Holy Thing which shall be born of thee, shall be called the Son of God.’”
[17] This point is particularly emphasized and shown in the fact that the phrase "for us" appears 47 times in Books 1 and 3. Ibid., 1.41: For example, "Therefore, because he was the image of the Father, and because he was immortal, the Word 'took the form of a slave' [Phil. 2:7] and for us as man in his flesh endured death, that thus on our behalf through death he might offer himself to the Father. There also as man, on account of us and on our behalf, he is said to be highly exalted, so that in in his death we all have died in Christ so that in Christ himself again we may be highly exalted…" Ibid., 1.41: For example, "Therefore, because he was the image of the Father, and because he was immortal, the Word 'took the form of a slave' [Phil. 2:7] and for us as man in his flesh endured death, that thus on our behalf through death he might offer himself to the Father. There also as man, on account of us and on our behalf, he is said to be highly exalted, so that in in his death we all have died in Christ so that in Christ himself again we may be highly exalted…"[17]
[18] Ibid., 1.38-39: "…he did not have the title of Son and God as a reward; rather, he himself has made us sons to the Father, and deified men, having become man himself… but being God, he later become man, that instead he might deify us." Similar expression regarding deification of Athanasius would be found in 1.42. 1.45, 3.39.
[19] Ibid., 3.38: "For He did not, when He became man, cease to be God; nor, whereas He is God does He shrink from what is man’s; perish the thought; but rather, being God, He has taken to Him the flesh, and being in the flesh deifies the flesh."
[20] Ibid., 3.28: " Now what has been briefly said above may suffice to shew their(Arian's) misunderstanding of the passages they then alleged; and that of what they now allege from the Gospels they certainly give an unsound interpretation."
[21] Ibid., 3.29: "Now the scope and character of Holy Scripture, as we have often said, is this,—it contains a double account of the Savior; that He was ever God, and is the Son, being the Father’s Word and Radiance and Wisdom; and that afterwards for us He took flesh of a Virgin, Mary Bearer of God, and was made man."
[22] Athanasius also used the emphatic vindication of worship as the exclusive prerogative of divinity. He argues that the worship of the Son even before his incarnation and exaltation proves that he is really the true God. See ibid., 1.43: "He only who is really God is worshipped in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ. For the fact that the Lord, even when come in human body and called Jesus, was worshipped and believed to be God’s Son, and that through Him the Father was known…", and ibid., 3:32: "…we may become, not worshippers of any other, but truly devout towards God, because we invoke no originate thing, no ordinary man, but the natural and true Son from God, who has become man, yet is not the less Lord and God and Savior."
[23] Ibid., 1.9: '(He is) Very Son of the Father, natural and genuine, proper to His essence, Wisdom Only-begotten, and Very and Only Word of God is He; not a creature or work, but an offspring proper to the Father’s essence. Wherefore He is very God, existing one in essence (homoousios) with the very Father."

2015年12月4日星期五

轉自: Got Questions Ministries 事工 [Are the teachings of Witness Lee and the Local Church biblical?]

[What is the conclusion of the matter, and what are Christians to believe about Witness Lee and the Local Church movement? Elliot Miller, editor-in-chief of the Christian Research Journal, declares at the end of the 50-page treatment “We were wrong” and concludes that the Local Church is not an “aberrant Christian group” but a “solid orthodox group of believers.” (note: http://www.equip.org/christian-research-journal/we-were-wrong-2/) Since Got Questions Ministries has a cordial and respectful relationship with CRI, we have no doubt their conclusions are based on extensive and diligent research and are therefore valid.] (Got Questions Ministries )


Question: "Are the teachings of Witness Lee and the Local Church biblical?"

Answer: Please note - many have approached us and expressed disappointment that we tend to agree with CRI's assessment of the Local Church movement. There are many people, some of them formerly involved in the Local Church, who are absolutely convinced that the Local Church is a cult, or at least a non-biblical and non-evangelical movement. The more we research the Local Church, however, the more we run into widely divergent views of the movement. As a result, we have decided to leave our Local Church article as it currently is. However, due to the major concerns many people have about the Local Church, we strongly advise you to use the utmost caution and discernment before visiting or joining the Local Church movement. Here are some sites at which you could pursue further research into the Local Church / Witness Lee / Living Stream movement:

Witness Lee was the protégé of his predecessor, Watchman Nee, a well-known missionary in China. The Local Church movement was founded in China by Nee and brought to America in 1962 by Witness Lee. Thus began a long and strange saga of charges, counter-charges, lawsuits, strife, and misunderstandings between the Local Church movement and the evangelical community that has left much wreckage in its wake, and has yet to be fully resolved. Foremost in the controversy is whether the LC is a legitimate movement within Christianity or a cult. Statements made by Lee over the years have caused his organization to be described as a cult by such counter-cult organizations as the Christian Research Institute—under both founder Walter Martin and current president Hank Hanegraaff—and the Spiritual Counterfeits Project. However, a 50-page series of articles in a 2009 edition of the CRI Journal has come out strongly in favor of Lee’s teachings and the Local Church movement. 

The history of the conflict between Witness Lee and his Local Church movement—also known as the “Lord’s Recovery Movement,” along with their publishing arm, Living Stream Ministry (LSM)—and the counter-cult establishment is far too long for a detailed recounting here, but those who are interested in the full story can access it through the CRI website http://journal.equip.org/issues/we-were-wrong. Since the publication of CRI’s retraction of their former stand, churches and ministries, including GotQuestions.org, have had to rethink and reinvestigate their stand on Witness Lee and the Local Church. 

For the purposes of this article, the major causes of controversy between the Local Church and the Christian community in the West will be addressed. The concerns raised by counter-cult organizations about Lee’s teachings center primarily on four areas: the nature of God, the nature of man, the legitimacy of evangelical churches and denominations, and the lawsuits brought against Evangelical churches, publishers and individuals by the Local Church. We will look at them one by one. 

Regarding Lee’s views on the theological doctrines of God and man, the controversy centers around statements which are “red flags” to evangelicals, particularly those in the West. This is an important factor in this discussion because it appears much of the controversy could have been avoided if only Lee and his followers had made an effort to understand the Western Christian culture into which they were moving. Part of the training of Western missionaries sent to foreign countries is sensitivity to other cultures. Unfortunately, in bringing their doctrines to the West, no effort was made to “Westernize” them, and this was the source of much of the confusion, misunderstandings, and recriminations that resulted. For one thing, Lee’s method of teaching—to make radical statements and then balance them elsewhere in his teachings—proved to be antithetical to the Western idea of “say what you mean and mean what you say.” Lee’s doctrinal statements on the nature of God and the nature of man are perfect examples. In one of his messages, he states, “The traditional explanation of the Trinity is grossly inadequate and borders on tritheism” (Life Messages, p. 164). Naturally, this is enough to inflame Western evangelicals, who proudly affirm the doctrine of the Trinity as it has been passed down from the great theologians of our Western Christian heritage. To judge it to be “grossly inadequate” by Lee raised legitimate concerns about Lee himself. Closer scrutiny of Lee’s teachings elsewhere, however, brings to light that they actually agree with evangelical orthodoxy. 

The same can be said of his teachings on the nature of man. Some of his most inflammatory statements are in regard to what appears, on the surface, to assert the deity of man. In an LSM publication, A Deeper Study of the Divine Dispensing (p. 54), Lee states, ”My burden is to show you clearly that God’s economy and plan is to make Himself man and to make us, His created beings, God.” On page 53 we read, “We are born of God; hence, in this sense, we are God.” In the same publication, Lee refers to the Triune God as now the ‘four-in-one’ God, with man as the fourth person. Nothing raises a red flag to evangelicals more quickly than any notion that man is God, because we are rightly taught that it is the original lie from the Garden of Eden (Genesis 3:5) and is the same lie propagated by cults and false religions such as Hinduism, New Age, and Mormonism throughout history. To the Western mind, at least, imparting the idea of any kind of godhood to those who struggle against the sin nature is disastrous. Western Christians, already steeped in the philosophy of freedom, autonomy, individuality, and the triumph of the human will—and the pride such thinking inevitably produces—need not be encouraged to see themselves as divine. But the CRI researchers found that a closer examination of context and terminology reveals that Lee’s views on the “deification” of man (another unfortunate choice of words and a red flag term) do not really mean that at all. The sentence after the “in this sense, we are God” quote reads, “Nevertheless, we must know that we do not share God’s Person and cannot be worshipped by others.” Herein lies the problem. Putting the two statements together, Lee is essentially saying we are God, but we are not God. It is no wonder that confusion is rampant. 

Regarding the third area of controversy, this is what Witness Lee has said in his own publications about Christians and Christianity: “We do not care for Christianity, we do not care for Christendom, we do not care for the Roman Catholic Church, and we do not care for all the denominations, because in the Bible it says that the great Babylon is fallen. This is a declaration. Christianity is fallen, Christendom is fallen, Catholicism is fallen, and all the denominations are fallen. Hallelujah!” Once again, Lee’s unfortunate choice of words, possibly due to English not being his native language, has caused consternation among American evangelicals. To say that Christianity is fallen is seen as painting with a far-too-broad brush and accusing the entire of the body of Christ of being false and fallen creatures. But here again, we have to dig more deeply to find what Lee really meant by that statement. Context and terminology are once again at the center of a true understanding of Lee’s doctrine. After careful and diligent examination, the CRI researchers came to the conclusion that Lee’s pattern of the use of “certain hot button words associated in our minds with heresy or cultism” has led to misunderstanding of his meaning. 

As one of the LSM leaders expressed it, “We are not out to proclaim that the denominations are Babylon.” However, Lee’s own statement, quoted above, that “we do not care for all the denominations, because in the Bible it says that the great Babylon is fallen,” seems a direct contradiction, whether intentional or not. 

The fourth major area of controversy between evangelicals and the Local Church centers on the number of lawsuits brought by the Local Church and LSM leadership against individuals and ministries that were critical of them, despite the clear New Testament teaching against suing a Christian brother (1 Corinthians 6:1-8). This led to allegations of a “history of litigiousness” on the part of the Local Church and charges that they forced some of their opposing ministries into bankruptcy by the litigation expenses they were forced to incur. This is a complicated situation that has gone on for more than a decade and the details—who sued whom, when, and how often—are still in dispute among the parties. For a complete history of the litigants and legal decisions, the reader is once again referred to the CRI article.

Summing up the crux of the conflict, it would appear that both parties bear a share of the responsibility. Lee and the Local Church leadership do not share the Western heritage that has shaped the thought processes and approaches of the Westerners among whom they settled. English was not their first language, particularly of the early leaders, and both the cultural differences and language barrier led to much misunderstanding. At the same time, the Local Church’s distinctively Chinese approach to Christianity was so unfamiliar to Westerners that it smacked of cultism, whether or not any actually existed. The Local Church leadership was unaware of the impact the use of certain “hot button” words would have on cult-wary evangelicals in America, while Western Christians were unaware of the tremendous impact that labeling a group a cult had on the Chinese. The Local Church resisted any changes in their terminology and for the most part refused to provide contextual explanations for some of their doctrines, an unfortunate approach that led to even deeper rifts between the two sides. At the same time, the counter-cultists failed to be as thorough as they could have been in their research. Thus, both sides developed an “us vs. them” mentality which negatively influenced both their thoughts and actions. 

What is the conclusion of the matter, and what are Christians to believe about Witness Lee and the Local Church movement? Elliot Miller, editor-in-chief of the Christian Research Journal, declares at the end of the 50-page treatment “We were wrong” and concludes that the Local Church is not an “aberrant Christian group” but a “solid orthodox group of believers.” Since Got Questions Ministries has a cordial and respectful relationship with CRI, we have no doubt their conclusions are based on extensive and diligent research and are therefore valid. It is left to the individual Christian to decide whether the thousands of man-hours, not to mention the expense of defending the various parties in court, the decades of charges, defenses, counter-charges and acrimony have not been, at best, a waste of time and at worst, a blot on the face of Christianity. How much more profitable it would have been if the hundreds of people and thousands of hours had been dedicated to knowing, loving, and obeying Jesus Christ. No doubt the counter-cult organizations thought they were providing a much-needed service to the Christian community. No doubt the Local Church and Living Streams Ministry felt they were justified in their quest to clear their names and set the record straight. But as alluded to above, much of the controversy could have been avoided in the first place by more careful attention by both sides to the details of cross-cultural communication. The old saying “the devil is in the details” finds its verification in this sad situation. The fear is that the devil may have profited from this controversy more than the body of Christ, and for that, all parties are culpable.

2015年9月30日星期三

書評系列〈2〉:The Humanity of God, Chapter 2 (Richmond: John Knox Press, 1970), by Karl Barth, John N. Thomas and T. Wieser (translators)

湃  恩

第一部分:縱觀作者寫作目的與特色、主旨及論證方法
本書作者卡爾·巴特(Karl Barth18861968),被視為20世紀最具影響力的更正教神學家,領頭轉變了19世紀起更正教的神學方向。巴特長於改革宗信徒家庭,受業於當時自由神學大師如哈納克(Harnack)和赫曼(Wilhelm Hermann)門下。可是,到了一戰期間,他的神學有了徹底的轉向,並為當時神學界帶來極大的衝擊,自此開展出一個新的神學方向。[1]
        巴特的神學思想可分為三個時期[2]:早期(19191930年)在《羅馬書註釋》強調「神人的鴻溝」,以及「神乃絕對的他者」而「讓神是神」;後來中期(19301950年)在《教會教義學》中強調客觀之「神的啟示」,漸漸注意從立約的角度了解神人的關係,並以基督為中心重構基督教教義;晚期的階段(19501968年),巴特更從基督論的角度重探神的本質,尤其祂與人關係。[3]
本書乃是巴特於1956年,在瑞士亞奴(Aarus)與一群瑞士改革宗牧師的聚會,向他們的鼓勵和勸勉的談話。[4] 巴特在這時期強調那與人對話、相遇並同在的神本文的評述範圍是本書的第二篇文章—神的人性The Humanity of God)。本文的特色是在回顧19世紀以來的神學發展史為背景下,重新以『基督論』的視角來看神的本質,及其引伸的神學意義
巴特在本文的主題是從神的神性之認識,認識「祂的人性」[5] 他在開首開宗明義說「神的人性」,意即神與人的關係,並那位轉向人、以應許與誡命向人說話,要作人的神。[6] 他接著指出要正確理解「神的神性」,在於理解道成肉身之「神的人性」。在耶穌基督裡面,「神的神性」完整地包含了「神的人性」。[7] 那「活神的神性」通過具有完全人性的耶穌給我們認識。[8]
第二部分:分析作者處理問題的思路及論證過程的邏輯
除引言外,全文分作三個部分:第一部分巴特提出他的首要基本問題:我們認識到神的甚麼(What do we know about God)?第二部分巴特提出第二個基本問題:我們如何認識到神的神性(How do we come to know God’s deity)?最後部分,巴特的問題是:這對神的(人性)認識向我們有甚麼含意(What does this knowledge – of God’s humanity - then imply for us)?在每個段落中巴特都作出了回答。
引言
巴特在引言中憶述近代思考福音神學的轉變歷史。他於1920年代曾與他老師哈納克展開精彩而激烈的公開辯論。[9] 那時候,巴特起來批判使用歷史批判法所建立的自由神學,他反對將信仰變作人的文化,強調神與人在本質上有絕對的差異,祂是完全的他者,而罪就是混亂神與人之差別。並且,他強調神學的出發點並非是人的宗教經驗、理性、哲學或自然等「從下而上」進路,而是,並唯獨是神的客觀啟示和信仰的「從下而上」進路。但在檢視過去後,巴特發現那時候他似乎過於側重神的超越性一面現在看來,有欠完整,需要作出補充:在神的超越裡有完全的人性,祂親自取了人性,聯繫了神人間的鴻溝,完全的向著人並為著人。這完全出乎祂的恩典。
第一節:我們認識到神的甚麼?
在第一節,巴特回溯基督教神學的發展歷史,指出自士來馬赫以降至當時的百餘年來,神學走了一個錯誤的方向,成了人追尋神的神學。這種由人為中心和出發點的神學形式和趨向,是宗教的religionistic)、人為中心的anthropocentric)和人文的humanistic),使人的敬虔成了福音神學研究的主題和對象,[10] 這結果導致對神的思考和認識,變成不過以神聖的「外衣」來思考宗教[11]
巴特指出聖經的主題,其實是神的神性(God’s deity),包括祂的獨立存有與獨特屬性、祂與自然世界和屬靈世界的關係、祂的大能和主動,以及最重要的—祂與人的關係。[12] 我們不應從人的敬虔和宗教角度來思考神,而應從「神的人性」—祂與受造之人的關係,來思考神。因為神並非在真空的範圍中向人證明和啟示,而是在人的歷史裡,祂與人同在和對話中向人啟示祂自已。[13] 神運用祂自由選擇以此方式向人揭示,證明祂的神性,以及祂是一位活神[14] 故此,我們可以說,神的神性是包含著祂的人性[15] 這完全逆轉了前一世紀的神學向度。
第二節:我們如何認識到神的神性?
在第二節,巴特接著說我們如何能認識神的神性。答案是我們只能從耶穌基督身上認識。祂是真神,也是真人,祂有完全的神性和完全的人性;在祂裡面,神與人彼此相遇,立約的實際也在祂裡面得以維繫和實現。祂作為主降下來與人契合;祂作為奴僕上升來與神契合。祂是神與人之間的中保復和者啟示者。神人二性在祂位格內完全地合一(hypostatic union)。[16] 全本聖經的中心乃是見證這一位人物。我們不能抽離祂來思考神或人,因為神是以作為完全的人之方式叫人與神復和、向人立約並啟示祂自已。[17] 巴特認為這是當代福音神學要思考和傳講神的新方向。[18]
巴特進一步指出,在耶穌基督裡面,神最高的自由乃是祂自由選擇去愛。巴特將神的屬性分為愛與自由兩大類,這些屬性在耶穌基督裡面最完滿地展現。這位「自由而愛」的神,祂在耶穌基督裡自由選擇去愛人類,甚至與人完全合一。故此,神的神性是無法排除,反之,乃是包含祂的人性[19]—神與人以完美的關係共存在基督裡。當基督一次而永遠取了人性後,神甚至不能沒有人而存在[20] 巴特接著解釋,雖然神永遠的愛在祂的位格內在是足夠存在的,但神憑著祂的自由選擇要愛人,要與人同在,並完全為著人。這是出於祂的恩典,白白的給予人。這就是神的人性。[21]
第三節:對神的認識向我們有甚麼含意?
在第三節,巴特提出五點關於這種對神(祂的人性)的認識,對我們(教會的牧者及神學工作者)有甚麼神學和教牧含意。因著認識神的人性,首先,會使人們認識人本身的獨特性,承認每一人都是基督的兄弟姊妹,以及神的兒女。[22] 第二,會給予神學文化一個特定主題,那就是神與人的相遇(God-man-encountering)歷史。神學只能由此這觀點了解耶穌基督,並從祂的位格來了解神學。[23] 第三,會給予基督徒神學思考和講說一個特定態度和聯繫。神學不能「閉門造車」,也不能「離地」,它必須是與人群保持對話,它是一門動態的藝術,時刻維持與神(禱告)和與人(講道)的對話。[24] 第四,會使教牧和神學工作者的宣講話語的心情和聲調總是正面積極的,因為神與人立約的宣講充分顯示出祂的恩典和對人的肯定。這些話語的確是「好消息(福音)」,並且這乃是教會宣教的必要「框架」。[25] 最後,會使人們更肯定、認同教會—基督的身體、新以色列。我們每個人都是在教會這群體中蒙神在耶穌基督裡所揀選、呼召、拯救和構成的,並由聖靈所建立和聯結,被差派在世界中作祂團體的見證。故我們必須參與教會的生活和事奉,在其中尋找自已的合適位置。[26]


第三部分:從各方面對本書評論
對牧養處境的含意/應用
縱觀全文,筆者認為對牧養處境的含意/應用有三:
(一)巴特的神學架構完全以基督為中心,對神論(神的人性)的探究也不例外。他指出在基督裡乃是神與人相遇的範圍。筆者觀察近十數年香港華人教會在『屬靈消費主義』影響下,信徒與三一神的生命關係,漸失於他們生命中的首位。[27] 甚至連教會也往往注重信徒人數的增加,過於幫助信徒建立與三一神親密、愛的團契關係,以致『信主的人多,但委身的人少』的情況滿目皆是,信徒生命的中心普遍地並沒有因福音從自已轉移到以基督為中心。筆者認為巴特提出以基督為中心來認識神的人性,有助信徒恢復以基督為生命的中心,深化信徒的信仰經驗,提升信徒靈性品質與教會的見證以委身順服作為對神的愛和恩典的回應
(二)巴特從「神的人性」提醒我們,教會作為信徒群體,其蒙召乃是要服事這個世界。作為教牧與神學工作者,需要時刻保持與神和與人群的對話,他們不能逃避世界,因為沒有「私人基督教」這回事。教會必須進入世界來回應福音,正如神在基督裡也進入了世界,儘管教會回應的方式與世人有所不同。[28] 這觀點可謂與潘霍華的「作門徒的代價」互相呼應。面對近年香港政治環境急速惡化,教會不能再不過問社會與政治之事,更不能為求自保、利益或權力而沉默或贊同政權的不義行徑,失卻教會向世界的宣講。筆者祈求香港教會不重蹈二戰時德國教會,以及50年代中國教會的失敗覆轍。
(三)巴特強調神在耶穌基督裏正是充滿了人性的愛肯定了神對人的尊重,由此顯示出神對人無限和白白的恩典。每一個做神學的人在思考和傳講時都應該受這觀點的支配,這是作為神學人的責任,正如他自已於本文所說:「我們神學的責任,乃是要看到並了解神的恩慈比我們先前所認識的更大。」[29] 在香港這貧富差距日益嚴重的社會中,教會也日漸趨向「中產化」,我們對社會上的窮人,心底裡是否向富人抱有同樣的愛和尊重?教會有否體認社會低下階層人士也是基督的兄姊與神的兒女?心裡有否如雅各書所描述的情景:重看那穿華麗衣服的人,說,請你坐在這好位上;又對那窮人說,你站在那裡,或坐在我腳凳下邊。(二3)?教會有否忘記福音給我們看見之神的人性,以及自已的蒙召使命?有否以行動、踐行反映我們對「神的人性」的真實認識?
作信仰反思或神學與聖經批判
筆者對本文也有三點反思和批判:
(一)巴特以迦克墩式基督論作視角探究神的人性。無疑,這是回歸到教會傳統及改革家的正統教導,將基督帶回到基督教思想的中心。[30]但他以基督為他整個神學的建構原則,結果似乎使每個教義都成了基督論,也使其他教義的份量不免被壓縮了。例如,在探討神的人性時,聖靈的角色和工作是如何?祂與基督和神的關係如何?似乎巴特有所忽略和偏頗,探討未及全面。故有學者指巴特神學為唯基督論[31]
(二)巴特對人的關懷完全透過耶穌基督的角度來表達。透過聖經與聖靈的光照,對人性黑暗面的洞悉,他拋棄了自由神學與共產主義中對人性善良面過度樂觀的誤認。如張立明所言[32],這反映出巴特超越時代的遠見。教會一面不應與世界隔絕,而要參與世事;然而,另一面教會參與政治社會時亦要反思,他們是否抱著某種主義或價值觀去參與,以期待某種理想之社會出現?如巴特所言,教會的主要責任乃是向世界宣講神審判和恩典的道。教會乃是一群首先聆聽神審判和恩典之道的群體。[33] 故此,我們不該忘記不論什麼主義或理想,革命或當權者,神的話仍將無情地臨到一切自以為義的人。
(三)巴特帶著他的揀選論所論到之「神的人性」,首先,難免讓人引起他持有普救論(universalism的爭議。[34] 雖然他不承認,但也不否認。[35] 。無疑神的恩典是浩瀚深邃,人無權為祂的恩慈設限,但這觀點所帶的連銷系統神學效應(systematic consequence)可不少,幾乎遍及各教義[36],尤其對復和觀的理解,以及有輕看聖經中不信和悔改相信之呼召的危險。[37] 作為神學家,巴特無法含糊其辭,而應作更仔細解釋,神的恩慈若是沒有限制,其引伸之結論將會如何。不然,儘管神學方法不同,但巴特會難免諷刺地得出與士來馬赫相同的救恩觀結論—普救論
還有,也有人指控巴特所描述之「神的人性」近乎進程神學(Process theology的描述,即神的本體似乎沒有人的話,不能獨立存在或有所缺乏。神的本體似乎是會有所改變,祂的位格會受祂與人建立的關係所影響。[38] 的確,將神的人性描述為包含在神的位格內,有陷入進程神學,但筆者認為這指控並不成立,因為進程神學主要是指出神的存有是受祂與世界及/或人的關係而不斷「改變」中,但巴特並沒有這含意,他是認為神的存有裡,包含著「人性」,表現在祂渴望與人建立關係,甚至與人的聯合上,並沒有含示神的存有是動態的。故認為對巴特這指控並不成立。




[1] 葛倫斯(Stanley J. Grenz)、奧爾森(Roger E. Olson):二十世紀神學評論(20th Century Theology),劉良淑、任孝琦譯(臺北:校園),頁76-82
[2] 參林鴻信:〈基督宗教思想史(下)〉(臺北:國立臺大,2013),頁611-620
[3] 參郭鴻標:〈巴特的生平與神學簡介〉。
[4] Karl Barth, The Humanity of God, p.37 footnote.
[5] Ibid., p.38: “Our problem is this: to derive the knowledge of the humanity of God from the knowledge of His deity.”
[6] Ibid., p.37: “Rightly understood that (the humanity of God) is bound to mean God’s relation to and turning toward man. It signifies the God who speaks with man in promise and command.”
[7] Ibid., p.46: “It’s precisely God’s deity which, rightly understood, includes his humanity.”
[8] Ibid., p.46: “How do we come to know that?... It is a Christological statement, or rather one grounded in and to be unfolded from Christology.”
  p.47: “…who and what God is in Jesus Christ…”
[9] 參歐力仁:〈神學的本質:啟示(神本)的或科學(人本)的?-重訪巴特和哈納克公開辯論〉,《神學與教會》,第廿七卷第二期,20026月。
[10] Karl Barth, The Humanity of God, p.39: “Evangelical theology almost all along the line, certainly in all its representative forms and tendencies, had become religionistic, anthropocentric, and in this sense humanistic. …Christian piety – had become its "object of study and its theme
[11] Ibid., p.39: “For this theology, to think about God meant to think in a scarcely veiled fashion about man, more exactly about the religious, the Christian religious man.”
[12] Ibid., p.41: “[T]he theme of the Bible is the deity of God, more exactly God's deity - God's independence and particular character, to only in relation to the natural but also to the spiritual cosmos; God's absolutely unique existence, might, and initiative, above all, in His relation to man.”
[13] Ibid., p.45: “What God is and what He is in His deity He proves and reveals not in a vacuum as divine being-for-Himself, but precisely and authentically in the fact that He exists, speaks, and acts as the partner of man…”
[14] Ibid., p.45: “He who does that is the living God. And the freedom in which He does that is His deity.”
[15] Ibid., p.46: “It’s precisely God’s deity which, rightly understood, includes his humanity.”
[16] Ibid., p.46-47.
[17] Ibid., p.46: “… The central and entire witness of Holy Scripture. Certainly in Jesus Christ, as He is attested in Holy Scripture, we are not dealing with man in the abstract…. But neither we are dealing with God in the abstract….”
  "In Jesus Christ there is no isolation of man from God or of God from man.”
[18] Ibid., p.47: “Who and what God is – this is what in particular we have to learn better and with more precision in the new change of direction in the thinking and speaking of evangelical theology, which has become necessary in the light of the earlier change.”
[19] Ibid., p.49: “It is when we look at Jesus Christ that we know decisively that God’s deity does not exclude, but includes His humanity… How could God’s deity exclude His humanity, since it is God’s freedom for love …”
[20] Ibid., p.50: “In Him the fact is once for all established that God does not exist without man.”
[21] Ibid., p.51: “His free affirmation of man, His free concern for him, His free substitution for him - this is God's humanity.”
[22] Ibid., p.53: “"On the basis of the eternal will of God we have to think of every human being, even the oddest, most villainous or miserable, as one to whom Jesus Christ is Brother and God is Father; and we have to deal with him on this assumption. … On the basis of the knowledge of the humanity of God no other attitude to any kind of fellow man is possible. It is identical with the practical acknowledgment of his human rights and his human dignity. To deny it to him would be for us to renounce having Jesus Christ as Brother and God is Father." 
[23] Ibid., p.55: “Since God in His deity is human, this culture must occupy itself neither with God in Himself nor with man in himself but with the man-encountering God and the God-encountering man and with their dialogue and history, in which their communion takes place and comes to its fulfillment. For this reason theology can think and speak only as it looks at Jesus Christ and from the vantage point of what He is.
[24] Ibid., p.59: “He whose heart is really with God and therefore really with men may have faith that the Word of God, to which he seeks to bear witness, will not return unto Him void.”
[25] Ibid., p.59-60: “[T]he sense and sound of our word must be fundamentally positive. Proclamation of the covenant of God and men, announcement of the place which is once for all opened and assigned to man in this covenant, …What takes place in God’s humanity is, since it includes that ‘No’ in itself, the affirmation of man.”
  p. 60: “The is what we have to testify to men in the view of the humanism of God,… everything else must be said only in the framework of this statement and promise.”
[26] Ibid., p.62: “…In the knowledge of the humanity of God one must take seriously, affirm, and thankfully acknowledge Christendom, the Church. We must, each in his place, take part in its life and join in its service.
[27] 慎防消費主義在教會蔓延〉,時代論壇第924期,2005-05-15http://christiantimes.org.hk/Common/Reader/News/ShowNews.jsp?Nid=29020&Pid=2&Version=924&Cid=2&Charset=big5_hkscs
  朱易:當教會遇上「消費主義文化」http://www.efccc.org/ArticleDetail.aspx?DocID=3326
[28] Karl Barth, The Humanity of God, p.58-59, p.64: “For this reason there is no private Christianity.… It can be carried on only in the Church – it can be put to work in all its elements only in the context of the questioning and answering of the Christianity community and in the rigorous service of its commission to all men.”
[29] Ibid., p.62: “Our theological duty is to see and understand it(the loving-kindness of God) as being still greater than we had seen before.”
[30] 邵葉爾(M. James Sawyer):神學求生指南》(The Survivor’s Guide to Theology),楊長慧譯,郭秀娟校(臺北:校園,2009),頁501
[31] 葛倫斯、奧爾森:二十世紀神學評論》,頁89
[32] 參張立明:〈紅色牧師的覺醒:談巴特早期的社會主義立場與轉變〉,http://indychinesechurch.org/barth
[33] Karl Barth, The Humanity of God, p.58: “In the Kerygma man recognizes himself as being under God’s judgement and grace, as the receiver of His promises and His command, and thus enters with his own understanding, will, and heart into the reality of that intercourse.”
[34] 普救論最初由神學家俄利根(Origenes Adamantius, AD. 185~251)提出,其學說於543年的第二次君士坦丁堡會議被定為異端。
[35] Karl Barth, The Humanity of God, p.62: “… to which one with a certain understanding of universalism could in fact deliver himself? This much is certain, that we have no theological right to set any sort of limits to the loving-kindness of God which has appeared in Jesus Christ.”
[36] 參張毅勤:〈普救論的聖經期礎和神學理據〉,http://faith100.org/基督教普救論的聖經基礎和神學理據/314
[37] 簡河培(Harvie M. Conn):《認識現代神學》(Contemporary World Theology),趙中輝,宋華忠譯,曾祖漢編(臺北:改革宗出版社,2012),頁34-37
[38] 葛倫斯、奧爾森:二十世紀神學評論》,頁153-171