Comments on: The Essential Van Til — His Relation to Scholasticism https://reformedforum.org/essential-van-til-relation-scholasticism/ Reformed Theological Resources Tue, 15 Aug 2017 18:32:42 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 By: Bob LaRocca https://reformedforum.org/essential-van-til-relation-scholasticism/#comment-3531046 Tue, 15 Aug 2017 18:32:42 +0000 http://reformedforum.wpengine.com/?p=5791#comment-3531046 Here is some Richard Muller,

“The Reformation, in spite of its substantial contribution to the history of doctrine and the shock it delivered to theology and the church in the sixteenth century, was not an attack upon the whole of medieval theology or upon Christian tradition. The Reformation assaulted a limited spectrum of doctrinal and practical abuses with the intention of reaffirming the values of the historical church catholic. Thus, the mainstream Reformers reconstructed the doctrines of justification and the sacraments and then modified their ideas of the ordo salutis and of the church accordingly; but they did not alter the doctrines of God, creation, providence, and Christ, and they maintained the Augustinian tradition concerning predestination, human nature and sin. The reform of individual doctrines, like justification and the sacraments, occurred within the bounds of a traditional, orthodox, and catholic system which, on the grand scale, remained substantively unaltered.” PRRD, Vol. 1, 97.

If the Medievals directly contributed to Reformed orthodoxy, even on matters of principle, wouldn’t Van Til’s attack on Medieval scholasticism be a biting of the hand that fed the hand that fed Van Til?

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By: Jamie Duguid https://reformedforum.org/essential-van-til-relation-scholasticism/#comment-3531021 Mon, 14 Aug 2017 18:43:58 +0000 http://reformedforum.wpengine.com/?p=5791#comment-3531021 I want this to be true. Can you provide a quote of Van Til saying something nice about Reformed scholasticism in general, or an individual Reformed scholastic, to seal the deal? Van Til must comment on this historical period in Reformed thought somewhere, right?

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