Theology beacon dictionary of theology



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ADOPTIONISM. Adoptionism is a type of Chris-tological thought which arose in Spain in the seventh and eighth centuries. Its first proponent was Elipandus of Toledo, although its most vigorous champion was Felix of Urgel. The the­ory distinguished between a "natural" and an "adoptive" sonship, the former predicated of the deity and the latter of the humanity of Christ. Christ was held to be naturally and properly the Son of God only in respect to His divinity, but in respect to His humanity He was Son of God only by adoption and grace. This view was con­demned by the Synod of Frankfort in a.d. 794 and by the Synod of Rome in a.d. 799.

Although the term adoptionism itself usually refers to this Spanish heresy, the theory has antecedents in earlier Christologies such as Ebi-onism, Dynamic Monarchianism, and Nesto-rianism. The latter, by making a strict separation between the divine and human natures of Christ, is especially anticipatory of the views of Eli­pandus and Felix. Adoptionistic tendencies char­acterized the entire "Antiochene school" of theology.

The strength of adoptionism, and of Anti­ochene Christology in general, lies in its grasp of the real humanity of Christ as over against the Alexandrian theology in which Christ's human­ity tends to be truncated. Its weakness is that if God had to wait until a man proved good enough to be adopted as His Son, Christian faith



w
ADORATION—ADVENTISM
ould have to abandon its central affirmation that God sent His Son to redeem the world. Belief in the divine initiative in salvation and in the provenience of grace would thus be impover­ished.

See antioch (school of), christology, hypo­static union, monarchianism, nestorianism.

For Further Reading: Gonzalez, A History of Christian
Thought,
1:253-58, 2:105-10; Kelly, Early Christian Doc-
trines,
115-19, 138-40, 301-17; Pelikan, The Christian
Tradition,
1:175-76. ROB L. staples
ADORATION. See worship.

ADULTERY. This is a term used in the Bible to designate the act of voluntary cohabitation with a person other than one's legal spouse. It differs from fornication inasmuch as adultery implies marriage, whereas fornication is a term applica­ble to any kind of sexual irregularity whether married or not.

In the Bible adultery is treated as a heinous sin. Not only is it explicitly prohibited in the Ten Commandments, but under Mosaic law adulter­ous parties were both to be put to death. The gravity of the sin is in its betrayal of trust, its violation and destruction of the most sacred hu­man relationship, and its disruptive effects on the home and society in general.

The Bible also speaks of spiritual adultery, as constituting the unfaithfulness of Israel or the Church, or an individual Christian, in his sacred relationship to God. Spiritual adultery occurs when one relates more loyally to the world than to God.

While the gospel offers forgiveness for either physical or spiritual adultery, rather than de­manding the death penalty, it in no degree min­imizes its gravity. Moreover, Jesus refused to allow guilt for adultery to be confined to the overt act, but attached it to the intent of the heart. According to the NT standards of pure motivation, persons could be adulterous in God's sight even when the outward act was avoided. This must not be interpreted, however, as a con­demnation for every thought which is sexual in nature or every experience of involuntary temp­tation. It is an expression of the moral principle that God weighs character by secret decisions and intentions, rather than by behavior alone.

See family decalogue, sex (sexuality).

For Further Reading: Wiley, CT, 3:79-94; Baker's DCE.



Richard S. Taylor

ADVENTISM. Adventism is the belief in the im-miment and literal return of Jesus Christ to the 29

earth. The English word Advent is derived from the Latin adventus, which means "arrival" or "coming." The NT equivalent of the word Advent is the term parousia (Gr., "coming" or "presence"). A significant facet of the second coming of Christ included in Adventism is the inauguration of a new age when the wicked will be overcome and the kingdom of the saints will be established on earth for 1,000 years.

In a generic sense millenarianism (Latin mille, "thousand"), chiliasm (Gr. chilioi, "thousand"), and apocalypticism are related to Adventism. The belief in a coming age of divine rule has its historical roots in late pre-Christian Judaism and early Christianity. Parts of the books of Daniel and Ezekiel are Jewish canonical literary exam­ples of the apocalyptic genre. Several apocalyptic books teach millenarian and Adventist tenets (e.g., 2 Esdras 7:50; 14:5; 1 Enoch 93:1-19; 91:12-17; 2 Enoch 33:1-2; 2 Baruch 44:11; 48:50; Testament of Issachar 6:1; and Testament of Ju-dah 25:3).

Historically, Adventism has had prominent proponents in early Christianity, including Poly-carp, Ignatius, Papias, Hermas, and Justin Mar­tyr. Montanus prophesied (between a.d. 150 and 175) that a new age would begin with the de­scent of a heavenly Jerusalem near Pepuza in Phrygia. Tertullian espoused one form of Mon-tanism in the early third century a.d.

Reaction against Montanism squelched Ad­ventist interests for nearly a thousand years until Joachim of Fiore, a priest (c. 1132-1202), began to write about a new age of the Spirit which was to commence in c. 1260. The Taborites in the 15 th century and certain Anabaptists during the Reformation period promoted Adventism. The term has a particular historical connection with the Adventist groups which arose as the result of the preaching of William Miller, a Baptist cleric born in 1782, in Massachusetts.

Miller began preaching in 1818 that the sec­ond coming of Christ would occur in 1843-44. He based his pronouncements upon a somewhat literal interpretation of portions of Daniel 9—10 and Rev. 20:1-10. America was experiencing the Second Great Awakening which heightened in­terest in Miller's prophecy. Great expectation was followed by great disillusionment when the pro­claimed dates passed with no return of Christ.

Ellen Harmon, a Methodist teenager, was one of the followers of Miller who was not disillu­sioned. She had a vision which aided her in rein­terpreting Miller's schedule for the Second Coming. Ellen married Elder White and became the guiding voice in the development of the
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ADVERSARY—AESTHETICS


Seventh-Day Adventist church, the largest of several Adventist groups which remain active.

Although most of the doctrines of the Seventh-Day Adventist church are generally or­thodox, they hold to at least three doctrines which set them apart from orthodoxy. They be­lieve in the "doctrine of the sanctuary" as a spe­cial and final ministry of Christ in the holy of holies in the "heavenly" sanctuary; in the obser­vance of the seventh day to keep the command­ments of God; in the "spirit of prophecy" (Rev. 19:10) which pertains to special latter-day mes­sages. Ellen White was accepted as the latter-day possessor of the "spirit of prophecy."

See apocalyptic (apocalypse), second coming of christ, judge (judgment), millennium.

For Further Reading: Martin, The Kingdom of the Cults, 360-423; Russell, The Method and Message of Jew­ish Apocalyptic, 263-303; GMS, 642-48; Wiley, CT, 3:243-319; Meagher, "Adventism," Encyclopedic Dictio­nary of Religion, 55-56. KENNETH E. HENDRICK
ADVERSARY. See satan.

ADVOCATE. Only in 1 John 2:1 is the Greek word parakletos translated "advocate" in the KJV and the RSV. In John's Gospel (14:16, 26; 15:26; and 16:7) the words "Counselor" or "Comforter" are used to identify the Holy Spirit as the One who is called to stand alongside of the accused.

The word "advocate" in John's First Epistle uniquely refers to Jesus Christ, the first Com­forter. It was the prayer of Jesus Christ which was answered by the Father on the Day of Pen­tecost by the sending of another Comforter in the person of the Holy Spirit (John 14:16).

The setting for this exceptional use of the word "advocate" is a court of law where the con­demned is not forsaken but lovingly represented by the only One who can stand between the sin­ner and a just God. This Advocate does not plead the case but points to His own blood as an ac­ceptable substitute for penalty.

It should not be overlooked that in this setting, sin is not an inevitability in the life of the Chris­tian, but rather it is an ever-present possibility. If sin should be committed, the Advocate becomes the assurance of fresh forgiveness and continued acceptance with the Father. The mediation is not a vindication (as if the Christian were falsely ac­cused and needed to be exonerated) but an ever-available basis for forgiveness, based on the once-for-all atonement of Calvary.

See propitiation, atonement, mediation (media­tor).

For Further Reading: Kittel, 5:800-14; Westcott, Gos-pel According to St. John, 2:188-91.

Robert A. Mattke

AESTHETICS. Aesthetics is a branch of philoso­phy which investigates the meaning and forms of beauty. It is sometimes described as a nor­mative science like ethics and logic since it deals with the field of values. It studies the nature of aesthetic pleasure, the objective and/or subjec­tive character of beauty, even the very nature of beauty itself. Included in this field are music, po­etry, drama, literature, painting, and sculpture. It also includes the field of natural beauty like the waving fields of grain, the setting sun, the gor­geous leaves of autumn, and the human face and form. It is also a study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of beauty.

History. The great art periods of history were in ancient Greece and the medieval and Renais­sance periods in Europe. The older theories of beauty were metaphysical and religious. Both re­ligion and national feeling inspired the work of the Greek masters. Plato believed beauty to be a reality in itself, a kind of eternal and unchanging essence or form. Plotinus, the Neoplatonist, be­lieved beauty to be the pure effulgence of the di­vine reason. Ruskin believed that beauty in objects is found in certain qualities such as unity, repose, symmetry, purity, and moderation, which typify divine attributes.

The modern theories of beauty are psycho­logical in contrast to the earlier ones. Immanuel Kant represents the beginning of the modern sci­entific and psychological study of aesthetic the­ory. For him beauty was a quality of objects, not a merely subjective taste. Today, the nature of beauty is much in question. People vary so widely in the area of artistic appreciation that many thinkers who would insist upon the exis­tence of norms in ethics and religion, are inclined to be quite subjective in the field of aesthetic ap­preciation.



Theories. (1) The ancient Greeks, especially Plato, thought of art and the art object as an im­perfect attempt and result to portray the univer­sal. (2) Those who are involved in the creation of beautiful objects, to them art is pleasure, and pleasure is its proper function. (3) Related to pleasure, art can be seen as an escape from life. It can be a form of relaxation in which man uses his creative imagination to pursue the arts. (4) Psychologists interpret art as empathy, in which people experience to a lesser degree what they would experience if they were participating in a situation or performing the actions which the



AFFECTIONS—AGAPE

31


work of art depicts. (5) Art is also a means of communication. Leo Tolstoy says, "By art man transmits his feelings." (6) According to the Ital­ian philosopher B. Croce, art is intuition that is expressed; it reveals preference and sense of val­ues. (7) For John Dewey art is experience. Art re­flects experience, like the grace of a baseball player. Art is a judgment on the quality of life and a means of promoting its development.

For the Christian the field of aesthetics says something basic about the nature of the universe and its Creator. Warren C. Young expresses it succinctly: "If man is to receive aesthetic satis­faction, this must be the kind of universe which works with his efforts. The interrelation of man and nature reflected in aesthetic experience is an additional argument for the existence of a Su­preme Being." This Supreme Being is revealed in the Bible. The Psalmist in Ps. 96:5-6 testifies that "the Lord made the heavens. Splendor and maj­esty are before Him, strength and beauty are in His sanctuary" (nasb). To understand, experi­ence, and appreciate the world of the aesthetic in its fullness, one needs to research the One who is the Source of all beauty, and to enter into a rela­tionship with Jesus Christ, who is altogether lovely.

See axiology, beauty, values, christian ethics.

For Further Reading: Wiley, CT, 2:51-61; Titus, Living
Issues in Philosophy,
5th ed., 380-97; Taylor, A Return to
Christian Culture.
nobel v. sack

AFFECTIONS. Affections are one's emotional at­tachments; in a popular usage, one's "loves." To possess an affection for or toward a person or thing is to be affected, i.e., moved by that object.

Pathos and pathema are in the NT "inordinate affection," i.e., irregular and uncontrolled emo­tional attachments and desires (translated "pas­sion" in recent versions, Rom. 1:26; Gal. 5:24; Col. 3:5; 1 Thess. 4:5). Approved affections are represented by splanchna, lit. "the bowels." By the Greeks the bowels were regarded as "the seat of the more violent passions, by the Hebrews the seat of the tender affections" (Vine); hence in the NT the word is rendered "affection" in such pas­sages as 2 Cor. 6:12; 7:15; Phil. 1:8 (nasb); a "heart of compassion" in Col. 3:12 (nasb).

While not an exact translation, perhaps, of phroneite (Col. 3:2), the KJV admirably expresses the sense: "Set your affection on things above"; for the Bible holds us accountable for the quality and direction of our affections. They are to be controlled by the will and directed, first to God, then toward persons and things in a holy and lawful way. Straying affections may very proba­bly be the most common cause of backsliding. Loving people with deep and tender attachment is not in itself to be feared, as long as such affec­tion is disciplined by a primary passion to please God. Christians are to be "devoted to one an­other in brotherly love" (Rom. 12:10, nasb).

See love, discipline, values.

For Further Reading: Vine, Dictionary; Wesley, A Plain Account of Christian Perfection.

Richard S. Taylor

AGAPE. Deriving from the verb agapad, this is the most significant biblical term for love. Found almost exclusively in the LXX and the NT (of its three supposed occurrences in prebiblical Greek, two are now read otherwise and the third is doubtful), agape has become the word which ex­presses most accurately the Christian meaning of love.

The three key verbs for love in prebiblical Greek are eran, philein, and agapan. Eran (n. eros) describes the passionate love which desires the other for itself, in order to experience personal fulfillment. Philein (n. philia) usually denotes the love of gods for men or friends for friends. In agapan is found little of the passion of eran or the warmth of philein. Agapan means "to prefer," "to esteem one person (or thing) more highly than another."

The specific meaning of agapan now becomes apparent. Eran expresses a general love seeking satisfaction where it can; agapan means to love another by choice. Eran speaks of a love deter­mined by its object; agapan denotes the free and decisive act of the subject. So, eran is more emo­tional while agapan is carefully volitional.

Probably because of its orgiastic associations eran I eros does not occur in the NT. However, philein is found in 25 references, sometimes syn­onymous with agapan (e.g., John 16:27; 1 Cor. 16:22; Rev. 3:19) but usually in its etymological sense (e.g., John 11:3, 36; 20:2; 21:17 [3]; trans, "kiss" in Matt. 26:48; Mark 14:44). Agapan, how­ever, occurs 140 times, and agape 85.

The volitional meaning of agapan/agape is ev­erywhere apparent in the NT. Agape may be good or evil, depending on whether one "pre­fers" God or the world (cf. Matt. 22:37 with 1 John 2:15; 2 Tim. 4:10; and see John 3:19).

In the Great Commandment Jesus uses aga-peseis, "thou shalt love," and declares our obli­gation to love God with our whole being. The same word is used to affirm our obligation to­ward our neighbor. To love God is to assign su­preme value to Him, i.e., to worship Him alone. To love neighbor as oneself is to prefer his high­





32

AGE, AGES—AGNOSTICISM


est good as one should seek his own true welfare. In Matt. 5:43-48 (cf. Luke 6:32-36) agape is love of enemy on the pattern of God's own inclusive love (cf. 1 John 4:10-11).

The Cross is the supreme expression of the di­vine agape (Rom. 5:8-10). This is the love of God which is not "caused" by anything attractive or worthy in man but, originating in God's own be­ing, is directed toward the unlovable and un­worthy. Agape does not seek but creates goodness. God, who loves us, does not seek any­thing for himself (cf. 1 Cor. 13:5); all He desires is to benefit us. And the benefit He wishes to im­part is not some "thing" but His very Self. By His Spirit He pours His agape into the believer (Rom. 5:5). Imparted to us by the new birth (1 John 4:7), agape is "perfected" in us when, by God's sanc­tifying grace, it reaches its intended goal of be­coming fully regnant within us so that of us it may be said, "As he is, so are we in this world" (vv. 17-18; cf. Rom. 12:9-21; 1 Corinthians 13). Agape is both God's gift (Rom. 5:5) and His com­mand (13:8-10).



Agape was also a term used for a solemn meal held in the Early Church in connection with the Lord's Supper. It probably began with the sepa­ration from the original eucharistic meal of ev­erything except the two acts connected with the bread and the cup instituted by Jesus. The prac­tice of the Agape varied from place to place, and was largely extinct by the seventh century in the Western church.

See affections, great commandments, broth­erly love, devote (devotion),



For Further Reading: Kittel, 1:20-55; Moulton and Milligan, The Vocabulary of the Greek New Testament; Nygren, Agape and Eros (2 vols.); Williams, The Spirit and forms of Love; Furnish, The love Command of the New Testament; Wynkoop, A Theology of Love.

William M. Greathouse

AGE, AGES. The concept of age can be associ­ated with the years of a person's life, indicating how old he or she may be. Old age was respected in the OT (Lev. 19:32; Deut. 32:7) and also in NT times (1 Tim. 5:1-2). Thus honor and the blessing of God were associated with old age (Prov. 16:31).

The term "age" was also loosely used of a long span of time, whether in the past, or the future. Even the eternity of God could be expressed in the phrase Rock of Ages ("Rock eternal," [Isa. 26:4, niv]). The KJV margin of Ps. 145:13 states that the Lord's kingdom is "a kingdom of all ages," meaning it has no beginning or end.

In the OT, KJV has other translations for the

Hebrew word behind "ages," such as "ever­lasting" and "ancient." The Hebrew word is olam or olamim (plural). Its basic meaning is unlimited time; or, a future without an end. The word des­ignates both God's covenant and promises as everlasting. The same is true of the Messianic King and His kingdom (Ps. 45:6; 89:35-37; 110:4). It is part of the title "Everlasting Father" (Isa. 9:6, Niv). The Hebrew word is also em­ployed in NIV to describe existence after death in such phrases as "eternal home" (Eccles. 12:5) and "everlasting life ... everlasting contempt" (Dan. 12:2).

In the NT, the concept of eschatological time is found in the phrase "in the coming ages" (Eph. 2:7, Niv), when the full riches of salvation will be revealed. This idea of a future without an end is also found in the phrase "for ever and ever" (3:21, Niv). These phrases rest in the Greek word aidn, which has the meaning of indefinite past time and indefinite future time. It is often trans­lated with futuristic words like "everlasting," "eternal," "eternity," "forever," etc. See passages such as 1 Tim. 1:17; Eph. 3:11; 1 Pet. 1:25; Heb. 5:6.

See eternity, time.



For Further Reading: ERE; IDB, 2:135-410.

George Herbert Livingston

AGNOSTICISM. This is the doctrine that man cannot have any certainty about God's existence or the supernatural generally, since such knowl­edge is by nature beyond the limits of human reason. Agnosticism is a type of skepticism. The skeptic is concerned with showing that human reason is restricted to function within set bound­aries. These boundaries limit the types of knowl­edge which are available to the mind. While the skeptic has doubts about the availability of hu­man knowledge in general, the agnostic confines his doubts to the areas of theology and meta­physics.

In the Greek language agnosticism means "un­known" or "without knowledge." The term was first used in the 19 th century by Thomas Huxley. Annoyed by the dogmatic assertions of the church which he felt were unsupported, Huxley reacted by refusing to commit himself on theo­logical issues.

For all practical purposes the agnostic is one who claims to be ignorant of the answers to life's ultimate questions. He refuses to take respon­sibility for this ignorance because the fault, he believes, lies not in himself but in the subject matter. The Christian response is that the agnos­tic is responsible, since he has kept the blind



ALEXANDRIAN SCHOOL—ALLEGORICAL INTERPRETATION

33


drawn on the sunlight of revelation. The Holy Spirit will bring assurance to a willing mind (John 7:17).

See epistemology, knowledge, faith, theistic proofs.



For Further Reading: Schaff, ed., Encyclopedia of Re-
ligious Knowledge,
1:36-38; Muggeridge, Albion Agnos-
tics;
"Man's Relationship with His Creator," Vital
Speeches,
Oct. 30, 1975. ROBERT A. MATTKE

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