The debate between supralapsarianism and infralapsarianism has caused many a sound theologian to throw up his hands in bewilderment and utter words akin to R.L. Dabney’s reaction: “In my opinion this is a question which never ought to have been raised.” But whether or not Dabney was right is beside the point at the present time, since more that 400 years of theologizing has stamped the ordering of the decrees upon the Reformed tradition. Positions have been taken, schemes have been developed, consequences have occurred. Thus, if we are going to do theology in the twenty-first century, we must be able to give an answer to such things and work out the most biblically consistent system.
This article will argue that of the two systems traditionally espoused (i.e. supralapsarianism and infra-lapsarianism), supralapsarianism is less consistent with the vital biblical-theological eschatology principle since it essentially makes creation a means to redemption. In order to unpack and defend this thesis, several brief observations will be made. First, comment must be made of the legitimacy of our inquiry. Second, the biblical-theological eschatology principle will be concisely explained from Scripture. Third, supralapsarianism’s failure to adhere to this principle will be examined.
Fourth, infra-lapsarianism as a more viable option will be presented. Finally, a reformulation of infralapsarianism will be offered in order to maintain its adherence to the eschatology principle while addressing valid supralapsarian concerns.
The Legitimacy of the Inquiry
Is it legitimate to speak of the decrees in the plural? The whole notion of ordering the decrees is often dismissed as an illegitimate argument since it seeks to separate and categorize hypothetical events that take place in the mind of God. Because God has archetypal knowledge of all things and His eternal decrees are ultimately one, arranging a plurality of decrees is seen by many as unjustifiable. But while it is clear that God’s archetypal knowledge conceives of only one decree, His ectypal revelation, with which our finite minds must do theology, compels us to speak of the decrees as if they are many. The same is true of God’s attributes: archetypally, God has one simple attribute (i.e. His perfection), but ectypally, we speak of many. As Louis Berkhof points out, we must understand this distinction while still embracing our necessary ectypal language:
There is, therefore, no series of decrees in God, but simply one comprehensive plan, embracing all that comes to pass. Our finite comprehension, however, constrains us to make distinctions, and this accounts for the fact that we often speak of the decrees of God in the plural. The manner of speaking is perfectly legitimate, provided we do not lose sight of the unity of the divine decree, and of the inseparable connection of the various decrees as we conceive of them.
The Creator/creature distinction is what drives our ordering of the decrees and our systematizing of theology in general. The following analysis, therefore, is legitimate and in no way “off limits.”
The Eschatology Principle
The biblical-theological principle of eschatology, in its most basic form, simply means that Adam was not created in order to fall and be redeemed, but was created in order to enjoy eschatological life. When Adam breached the Covenant of Works, he destroyed the possibility of entering in to the glory of God’s consummate kingdom with all of his progeny. Redemption by the second Adam, who fulfilled the Covenant of Works (and the Pactum Salutis), was introduced in order to bring all of God’s elect to their eschatological goal of resurrection life in the eschaton.
While no explicit promise of the consummation is given in the opening chapters of Genesis, it is nevertheless entailed by the presence of the Tree of Life in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:9; 3:22; cf. Revelation 22:14) and clearly implied in the rest of Scripture. We read in Romans 3:23, for example, that, “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” The sin and fall that Paul has in mind here is Adam’s sin and consequent fall, of which all humanity is guilty because Adam was our federal head and representative. This is clear from Paul’s use of the clause “glory to God”, which are the same words he uses in 5:12 to explain the effects of original sin in Adam’s covenantal headship. Thus, had man (i.e. Adam and all those he represented) not sinned, man would have attained the glory of God. This “glory of God” Paul explains in 8:18ff, as eschatological glory, viz., the glory of resurrection life in the age to come. Falling short of the consummation, the elect are brought to their blessed end only through faith in the perfect obedience of Christ.
Another crucial text to observe is I Corinthians 15:45-49. In his breathtaking explanation and defense of bodily resurrection in I Corinthians 15, Paul brings his readers face to face with the eschatological goal of creation. In verses 45-49, which is the center of his cosmological argument, Paul explains that God’s revealed order of life is first the natural (yucikon), then the spiritual (pneumatikon). Paul deliberately cites Genesis 2:7 to highlight Adam’s sinless, prelapsarian state in comparison to Christ’s resurrected, glorified state. By asserting such, Paul is showing that the Fall is not condoned by God as the necessary “first” episode. As Peter Jones points out, “[I]n Paul’s thinking, sin is not the ‘first’ event. The good creation is. So it is not Adam as the ‘first’ sinner, but Adam as the ‘first’ created human being that Paul has in mind in v.45.”
Furthermore, Paul’s analogy of Adam and Christ in 15:21-22 gives added weight to 15:45b; the basis of the last Adam becoming a life-giving spirit is His fulfillment of that which the first Adam failed to accomplish, viz., the Covenant of Works. Thus, Paul is developing the eschatological implications that he finds in Genesis 2:7, thereby showing that the spiritual, resurrected body is not the fulfillment of the body of sin, but the eschatological fulfillment of the natural, created body in the garden.
Supralapsarianism’s Inconsistency
While God’s revelation in redemptive history reveals that Adam was not created for the purpose of sin and redemption, supralapsarianism ultimately affirms such by ordering the decrees in the following manner:
1. The glory of God in Christ and His church.
2. The election of Christ as the Head of the church.
3. The elect church in Christ. (and reprobation)
4. The fall of all men.
5. The creation of the world and man.
By placing the decree to save and damn rational creatures before (or “above,” hence the Latin “supra”) the decree to permit the Fall, reprobation and election become equally absolute. The decree to permit the Fall is thereby executed in order to obtain the goal of election and reprobation. Likewise, the decree to create is necessary in order to save and damn for the glory of God. In other words, election and reprobation is what it’s all about. The Fall and creation are mere means to accomplish that end.
By rigidly applying this teleological principle to the divine decrees, however, supralapsarianism cannot do justice to the biblical-theological eschatology principle. Considering I Corinthians 15:45-49, supralapsarianism finds itself at odds with the Pauline eschatology. While Paul establishes the spiritual to be the eschatological fulfillment of the natural, supralapsarianism on the other hand, seems to affirm the spiritual to be the eschatological fulfillment of the Fall. This cannot be escaped by the supralapsarians since their system asserts the objective of the divine decrees as God’s glory in election and reprobation.
Infralapsarianism: A More Biblical Solution?
The classic alternative to supralapsarianism is infralapsarianism (also known as “sublapsarianism”), which typically runs as follows: God, with the design to reveal His own glory, that is, the perfections of His own nature, determined to:
1. Create the world.
2. Permit the fall of man.
3. Elect from the mass of fallen men a multitude whom no man could number as “vessels of mercy.”
4. Send His Son for their redemption.
5. Leave the residue of mankind, as He left the fallen angels, to suffer the just punishment of their sins.
Infralapsarianism, which is favored by the language of most Reformed confessions, is generally accepted because it does a better job of avoiding the problem of making God the active author of sin. Whereas the supralapsarian scheme posits sin as a necessary means to effect election and reprobation, infralapsarianism sees the opposite; election and reprobation are decrees of God in response to His permitting the Fall of man. Consequently, in the supralapsarian view, God reprobates by electing rational creatures to damnation without the consideration of sin or justice. On the other hand, infralapsarians believe God reprobates by electing His chosen ones for salvation from a common mass of sinners and leaving the rest in their sins to face their rightful judgment. The former views sin and reprobation positively; the latter views sin and reprobation negatively.
There is considerable biblical evidence for infralapsarianism. Jesus told His disciples: “You did not choose Me, but I chose you … I chose you out of the world” (John 15:16, 19; italics mine). Here we see that it is a larger mass of individuals from which Christ chose His own. Likewise, Paul wrote to the Ephesians: “He chose us in Him [that is, Christ] before the foundation of the world” (Ephesians 1:4; italics mine). Our election is in Christ. This clearly shows that we are conceived as fallen and in need of a redeemer.
In Romans 9, a passage often cited by supralapsarians in support of their view, Paul uses infralapsarian language: “Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and one for dishonor?” (Romans 9:21; italics mine). We should not understand this “same lump” as one universal group of human beings in a common state of neutrality; rather, we should understand this “same lump” as one universal group of human beings in a common state of sin and misery. This should be clear from the fact that Paul calls these vessels, “vessels of wrath prepared for destruction” (9:22) and “vessels of mercy … prepared beforehand for glory” (9:23). While both vessels are described as “prepared,” “mercy” and “wrath” imply that the elected objects are first conceived as sinful and deserving judgment. As Dabney rightly points out, “[T]hose virtues (mercy and justice) are relative, they pre-suppose their object, do not make it.” Sin is not on account of damnation; rather, damnation is on account of sin.
Infralapsarianism does not claim to have a comprehensive answer for why God permitted sin to enter the cosmos. Ultimately, infralapsarians must concede that God decreed the Fall (an objection readily made by supralapsarians). Nevertheless, because it views reprobation and election as God’s response to the Fall (instead of vice-versa), infralapsarianism offers a system which more carefully protects the justice of God. But more to the point of our thesis, infralapsarianism also upholds the integrity of creation to a degree that supralapsarianism cannot. Infralapsarians do not posit creation as a means to redemption in the way that supralapsarians do. For this reason, it must be accepted that infralapsarianism is more consistent with the eschatology principle. If the eschatological fulfillment of good creation is consummated re-creation, then redemption is not a necessary means to achieve that end. Redemption, rather, is God’s response to the Fall in order that creation will reach its eschatological goal. This is the point that supralapsarianism seems to miss altogether.
A Reformulation of Infralapsarianism
Of course, supralapsarians often protest that infralapsarianism fails to do justice to the teleological principle of the divine decrees and, consequently, the glory and sovereignty of God. The fact that Romans 5:14 testifies of Adam as a “type of the one who was to come” may add weight to their objection.
For this reason, a reformulation of infralapsarianism is offered below in order to answer this objection and still uphold the integrity of creation and its eschatological goal. In other words, it must be affirmed that while creation is not merely a means to the end of redemption, and while there would have been a glorious eschatological consummation if Adam had kept the covenant of works, nevertheless, God in His infinite wisdom foreordained Adam’s covenant breach in order to magnify the glory of His grace by achieving the eschatological goal of creation via the redemption in Christ the second Adam.
A possible modification might look something like this:
1. God, for the sake of His glory, decreed that human beings would attain eternal glory with Him by means of a federal covenant of works.
2. Decree to create all things.
3. Decree to subsume the human race under the federal headship of Adam in a covenant of works.
4. Decree to permit the Fall and thus allow the covenant with Adam not to be consummated.
5. Decree to elect from the mass of fallen humanity a countless multitude to possession of eternal glory through the covenant of works with Christ (His execution of the pactum salutis); and to reprobate the rest of fallen humanity to eternal perdition by leaving them, as He left the fallen angels, to suffer the just punishment of their sins.
There are several viable advantages to this scheme. First, it incorporates the best argument of the supralapsarians (i.e. the teleological principle) and of the infralapsarians (God elects and reprobates sinners rather than neutral human beings). In this way, both God’s sovereignty and justice are most protected. Second, it gives integrity to the original creation and the covenant of works. Third, the first Adam, while in a covenant with God, was from the very beginning a type of the One to come (Romans 5:14). Fourth, it remedies the typical covenant-less character of most traditional treatments of the order of the decrees.
Conclusion
In many ways, finding the perfect method of ordering the decrees is like finding the perfect analogy to describe the Trinity. It is impossible. The ectypal theology of the pilgrim can only go so far. The Creator/creature distinction must not be pressed. Yet, as we must responsibly systematize our understanding of the revelation given to us, infralapsarianism (and/or its posited reformulation) seems to offer the most biblically consistent scheme of such a profound subject. Among the number of its attractive advantages over supralapsarianism, infralapsarianism has the benefit of more readily adhering to the biblical-theological eschatology principle and, consequently, upholding the integrity of God’s good creation.
Rev. Michael Brown is the Pastor of the Christ United Reformed Church in Santee, California.