Saturday, February 7, 2026

Divine Voluntarism, Moral Knowledge, and the Image of God: A Critical Assessment of Gordon H. Clark’s Theology

 by Rev. William M. Brennan, TH.D.

Introduction

Gordon H. Clark is widely recognized for his rigorous defense of divine sovereignty, scriptural propositionalism, and a strongly voluntarist account of God’s will. His rejection of natural law, denial of a sincere or well-meant offer of the gospel, and emphasis on the ultimacy of divine volition were intended to safeguard God’s freedom and transcendence against what he perceived as rationalist or Thomistic intrusions into Reformed theology.

However, this essay argues that Clark’s theological system suffers from a deeper and more serious defect than is usually acknowledged. By radically disassociating divine volition from divine nature, Clark not only undermines the coherence of biblical moral revelation but also effectively denies the moral dimension of the image of God in humanity. The result is a depersonalized conception of God and a truncated anthropology that stands in tension with Scripture and the broader Reformed tradition.


I. Clark’s Doctrine of Divine Volition

At the center of Clark’s theology lies a robust form of divine voluntarism. God’s will, for Clark, is ultimate, non-necessitated, and unconstrained by any standard external to itself—including abstract moral principles or a rational order of goodness. Moral norms are good because God wills them; they are not willed because they are antecedently good.

Clark’s intent is clear: if God’s will were governed by His nature understood as a rational or moral standard, then divine freedom would be compromised. God would be reduced to acting “according to rules,” even if those rules were internal to His essence. Clark therefore insists that divine willing admits of no further explanation beyond the will itself.

Yet this move comes at a cost. By refusing to allow God’s nature to function as an explanatory ground for God’s commands, Clark renders divine volition opaque rather than revelatory. God’s will explains what is commanded, but not why it is fitting, good, or expressive of who God is.


II. The Disjunction Between Divine Will and Divine Character

Scripture consistently presents God’s commands as flowing from His character. Moral imperatives are grounded in divine self-disclosure: “Be holy, for I am holy”; “You shall love, for God is love.” In such texts, the force of the command depends precisely on the correspondence between divine nature and divine will.

Clark’s system cannot accommodate this biblical pattern without tension. If God’s commands do not express God’s moral nature but merely His sovereign authority, then obedience becomes compliance with power rather than participation in divine goodness. Commands disclose obligation, but not character.

This represents a form of theological depersonalization. God becomes intelligible primarily as a sovereign logician who issues true propositions and enforces decrees, rather than as a personal moral agent whose will expresses who He is. Ironically, in attempting to avoid subordinating God to reason, Clark produces a conception of God more abstract than that of the classical theists he criticizes.


III. The Denial of the Sincere Offer of the Gospel

Clark’s denial of a sincere or well-meant gospel offer follows logically from this voluntarism. The traditional Reformed account maintains that God may genuinely command all people to repent while decretively willing salvation only for the elect, without contradiction, because the command expresses God’s benevolent moral disposition even where salvation is not decreed.

Clark rejects this framework as incoherent. For him, God cannot will what He does not decree, and to attribute a universal salvific desire to God would imply frustrated or divided volition. Since divine will is simple and always efficacious, God cannot sincerely desire the salvation of the non-elect.

What is often overlooked is that this conclusion depends on Clark’s prior severing of will from character. If commands do not express divine benevolence or moral inclination, then there is no reason to suppose that God’s command to repent entails any corresponding desire for repentance. The gospel proclamation remains true in a propositional sense (“If you believe, you will be saved”), but it is no longer an expression of divine goodwill toward all hearers.


IV. Implications for the Image of God in Humanity

The anthropological consequences of Clark’s system are severe. Scripture teaches that human beings possess an innate moral awareness—a conscience—that reflects God’s law written on the heart. This moral knowledge presupposes a real analogy between divine goodness and human moral perception. Humanity images God not merely by possessing intellect, but by bearing a moral likeness that grounds accountability and culpability.

Clark effectively reduces the image of God to cognitive capacity, especially the ability to grasp propositions. Moral awareness, on his account, has no intrinsic authority; it is merely awareness of commands or sanctions. There is no stable divine moral character for conscience to reflect, because moral norms do not flow from God’s nature but from sheer volition.

As a result:

  • Conscience loses its theological grounding.

  • Moral responsibility becomes purely external.

  • Human beings no longer recognize the good as good, but only as commanded.

This stands in direct tension with Romans 2, with the biblical doctrine of conscience, and with the historic Reformed understanding of the imago Dei as including moral likeness, however marred by the Fall.


V. Comparison with the Reformed and Classical Traditions

The irony of Clark’s position is that the traditions he opposes—Thomistic, Augustinian, and Reformed orthodox—preserve a richer account of both divine freedom and moral intelligibility. Classical theology affirms that God’s will is not constrained by anything external, yet insists that God acts consistently with His own nature. Such “necessity” is not coercive but expressive of divine self-consistency.

Similarly, the Reformed tradition historically maintained that natural law and conscience are impaired but not erased by sin, precisely because they are grounded in God’s unchanging moral character. Clark’s system, by contrast, secures sovereignty at the expense of moral recognizability and personal communion.


Conclusion

Gordon Clark’s theology exhibits a striking internal coherence, but it does so by radically thinning key biblical doctrines. By isolating divine volition from divine nature, Clark undermines the moral intelligibility of God, dissolves the character-revelatory function of divine commands, denies the sincerity of the gospel offer, and effectively evacuates the moral dimension of the image of God in humanity.

The result is a conception of God who is sovereign and logically consistent, yet increasingly impersonal, and a conception of humanity that is accountable but no longer morally reflective of its Creator. In seeking to defend divine freedom against rationalism, Clark ultimately severs the very links between will, character, and moral knowledge that Scripture presents as essential to both divine revelation and human responsibility.

Monday, February 2, 2026

Theonomy, Postmillennialism, and the Problem of Premature Application: A Historical and Theological Reassessment

 by Rev. William M. Brennan, TH.D.

1. Introduction

The theonomic strand of Christian Reconstructionism emerged in the latter half of the twentieth century as an ambitious attempt to articulate a biblically grounded theory of law, culture, and civil order. Rooted in Reformed theology and typically coupled with postmillennial eschatology, the movement argued that the judicial case laws of the Mosaic covenant—properly understood and applied—retain normative relevance for modern civil jurisprudence, particularly in the area of penology. While the theological architecture of theonomy was internally coherent, its historical trajectory reveals a persistent tension between its eschatological premises and its practical strategy. This tension contributed significantly to the movement’s marginalization, internal fragmentation, and the strong reaction it provoked among Reformed critics.

This essay argues that while many of the leading critiques of theonomy—particularly those advanced by Meredith G. Kline, John Frame, and theologians associated with Westminster Seminary California—correctly identified serious methodological and pastoral flaws, they often erred in rejecting theonomic ethics in principle rather than distinguishing between the validity of its biblical claims and the imprudence of its historical implementation. A more careful reassessment suggests that theonomy failed not because it was necessarily unbiblical, but because it sought to enforce juridical outcomes without the prior cultural, spiritual, and ecclesial transformation its own postmillennial framework required.


2. The Theonomic Vision and Its Eschatological Foundations

Classical theonomy was consistently predicated on a postmillennial expectation of progressive gospel success in history. According to this framework, the discipling of the nations (Matt. 28:18–20) entails not only individual conversion but the gradual reordering of social, economic, and political institutions under the lordship of Christ. Civil law, in this vision, is not autonomous but morally accountable to God’s revealed standards, with Mosaic case laws serving as paradigmatic expressions of divine justice.

Crucially, theonomic writers generally affirmed that such legal transformation presupposes widespread covenantal faithfulness among the people. Law, in this account, is not the engine of regeneration but its public fruit. Civil obedience to God’s statutes was understood to follow—not produce—the internalization of God’s law written on the heart (Jer. 31:33). On paper, therefore, theonomic theory explicitly rejected coercive moralism and acknowledged the priority of spiritual renewal.


3. Historical Practice and the Reversal of Theonomic Order

Despite these stated commitments, the historical praxis of the movement frequently inverted this theological sequence. In public rhetoric, political proposals, and polemical literature, some theonomic advocates spoke as though legal enforcement could itself catalyze cultural repentance. The result was an overemphasis on political activism, legislative agendas, and civil penalties in a cultural context overwhelmingly unprepared to receive them—even within the church.

This strategic miscalculation produced several consequences. First, the movement failed to gain majority support among Reformed Christians, many of whom perceived theonomy as socially disruptive, pastorally insensitive, or politically unrealistic. Second, critics were often met not with patient instruction but with severe moral censure. Christians who prioritized evangelism, ecclesial reform, or ordinary vocations over political activism were sometimes portrayed as disobedient, cowardly, or complicit in cultural decay. In effect, the movement demanded covenantal fruits without sufficient attention to covenantal formation.


4. The Reaction of Kline, Frame, and the Escondido School

The sharpest academic resistance to theonomy came from scholars concerned to protect the law–gospel distinction, the redemptive-historical uniqueness of Israel, and the church’s pilgrim identity. Kline, in particular, argued that Mosaic civil law belonged to Israel’s typological status as a holy nation and therefore expired with the covenantal order it served. Frame, while more sympathetic to the ongoing relevance of biblical ethics, criticized theonomy for failing to appreciate the flexibility and contextual judgment required in applying scriptural norms. The Escondido theologians further emphasized a two-kingdoms framework, warning against conflating the mission of the church with the administration of civil righteousness.

These critiques were right to identify the dangers of collapsing eschatology into immediate political program, and correct to warn against confusing the church’s present vocation with the conditions of a future, more thoroughly discipled age. Where they overreached, however, was in treating theonomy itself as inherently coercive, theologically confused, or inimical to the gospel. In many cases, the critics addressed the worst expressions of the movement as though they represented its necessary conclusions, thereby dismissing the possibility of a chastened, patient, and ecclesially grounded theonomic ethic.


5. Recovering the Valid Insights of Theonomy

A more balanced reassessment allows for the recovery of several biblically grounded principles articulated by the theonomic tradition:

  1. The moral accountability of civil governments to God’s revealed law, rejecting the myth of juridical neutrality.

  2. The legitimacy of using biblical case laws as sources of general equity, rather than as wooden statutes.

  3. The responsibility of Christians to steward economic life faithfully, including preferential support for fellow believers rather than the habitual enrichment of those openly hostile to Christian moral norms (Gal. 6:10).

  4. The duty of political prudence, including voting for candidates whose platforms and character most closely approximate biblical justice, even when no option is ideal.

These principles do not require immediate theocratic implementation. Rather, they function as ethical guideposts, shaping Christian judgment and communal practice long before they shape national law.


6. A Blueprint for a Future Age—and a Warning for the Present

Properly situated, theonomy should be presented not as a mandate for immediate political overhaul, but as a blueprint for a future stage of cultural maturity—one that presupposes widespread regeneration, catechesis, and ecclesial health. In such a context, biblical law would no longer appear alien or oppressive, but as the codification of norms already embraced by the majority.

Until such conditions obtain, the church must resist the temptation to place the cart of political activism before the horse of spiritual formation. History suggests that premature legalism not only fails to transform culture but often provokes backlash, hardening opposition and discrediting otherwise sound biblical principles. Faithfulness in the present age therefore requires patience, humility, and a renewed emphasis on cultivating hearts capable of sustaining the social order theonomy envisions.


7. Conclusion

The failure of the theonomic Christian Reconstructionist movement was not fundamentally a failure of biblical ethics, but a failure of timing, tone, and pastoral wisdom. Its critics were right to warn against coercive overreach and eschatological impatience, yet wrong to dismiss the enduring relevance of God’s law to public life. A chastened theonomy—liberated from triumphalism and grounded in long-term discipleship—remains a viable and biblically serious framework for thinking about law, culture, and the lordship of Christ over the nations.

Capitalism, Scripture, and the Moral Boundaries of Economic Order

 by Rev. William M. Brennan, TH.D.

Introduction

Modern debates over economic systems frequently invoke moral and theological claims, particularly within Christian discourse. Capitalism is often criticized on ethical grounds, while alternatives such as socialism or collectivism are proposed as more “biblical” arrangements. This essay argues that such critiques often rely on imprecise definitions and conflate contingent abuses with foundational principles. When capitalism is defined minimally—as an economic order grounded in private property, voluntary exchange, capital accumulation, and the permissibility of profit—it is not only compatible with Scripture but is, in fact, the only system that allows biblically mandated economic principles to operate coherently and unhindered. At the same time, Scripture places clear moral limits on economic behavior and condemns abuses commonly associated with capitalism in practice. The solution, therefore, is not the rejection of capitalism as such, but its moral regulation within the boundaries already provided by biblical law and ethics.


I. The Minimal Requirements of Capitalism

To avoid ideological confusion, capitalism must be defined in its most basic form. At minimum, it requires four elements:

  1. Private ownership of property

  2. Voluntary exchange

  3. Capital accumulation

  4. Permissibility of profit

These elements do not imply laissez-faire absolutism, moral neutrality, or the absence of regulation. They describe only the minimal conditions under which capitalism exists at all.


II. Biblical Foundations for These Economic Principles

The Bible does not offer a technical economic blueprint, yet it consistently assumes and morally regulates economic life. Each of the four principles above is presupposed throughout Scripture.

1. Private Property in Scripture

Scripture consistently treats property as morally real and personally held. The commandment “You shall not steal” (Exod. 20:15; Deut. 5:19) presupposes a meaningful distinction between one person’s property and another’s. Likewise, prohibitions against coveting “your neighbor’s house” or goods (Exod. 20:17) affirm private ownership.

Old Testament law protects land ownership through inheritance (Num. 27:8–11) and condemns the removal of boundary markers (Deut. 19:14; Prov. 22:28). Narrative texts treat the seizure of private land by rulers as injustice, not governance (1 Kings 21:1–19; Mic. 2:1–2).

While God is presented as the ultimate owner of all things (Ps. 24:1), human ownership is treated as genuine stewardship, not a revocable privilege granted by the state.


2. Voluntary Exchange

Scripture assumes lawful buying and selling between private parties. Abraham purchases land through negotiated exchange (Gen. 23:3–20). Commercial transactions are regulated for honesty, not abolished (Lev. 19:35–36; Prov. 11:1).

The New Testament likewise presupposes market exchange. Jesus’ parables regularly reference buying, selling, wages, and contracts without moral suspicion (Matt. 13:44–46; 20:1–15). Interference with exchange is condemned only when it involves coercion or fraud (Amos 8:4–6; Jas. 5:4).

To deny voluntary exchange as a general principle would effectively nullify ownership itself—a conclusion Scripture never draws.


3. Accumulation of Property

Scripture does not prohibit accumulation as such. Saving and planning are praised as wisdom (Prov. 6:6–8; 21:5). Inheritance is treated as a blessing (Prov. 13:22), and wealth passed across generations is assumed rather than condemned.

Jesus’ parable of the talents affirms productive increase and condemns the refusal to steward resources fruitfully (Matt. 25:14–30). Accumulation becomes morally problematic only when achieved unjustly (Prov. 22:16) or retained without regard for obligation to others (Luke 12:15–21).

Thus, the right to retain and increase possessions follows logically from ownership and exchange and is regulated—but not abolished—by Scripture.


4. Profit as a Lawful Motive

Scripture treats gain as a normal outcome of diligence and wisdom. “The worker deserves his wages” (Luke 10:7; cf. 1 Tim. 5:18). Profit from honest labor is assumed in Proverbs (Prov. 14:23).

What Scripture condemns is not profit itself, but dishonest gain (Prov. 11:1; Jer. 22:13), exploitation (Ezek. 22:12), and the love of money as an ultimate allegiance (1 Tim. 6:9–10). Profit is therefore morally permissible, though never morally supreme.


III. The Incompatibility of Alternative Systems

If private property, voluntary exchange, accumulation, and lawful profit are biblically assumed, then any economic system that denies them in principle conflicts with Scripture.

1. Socialism and Communism

Systems that abolish or fundamentally relativize private property contradict the biblical understanding of stewardship and responsibility. By replacing voluntary exchange with centralized allocation and treating accumulation and profit as morally suspect, such systems negate moral agency and violate the assumptions embedded throughout Scripture (cf. Exod. 20:15; Prov. 22:28).

2. Statism and Collectivism

Economic orders that subordinate ownership entirely to political authority collapse the distinction between governance and stewardship. Scripture consistently warns against rulers who “take” rather than judge (1 Sam. 8:10–18), presenting confiscation as oppression, not justice.

3. Feudal and Hierarchical Economies

Systems that condition property and exchange on status or political favor undermine the biblical insistence on equal moral accountability and consent (Job 31:13–15).

No alternative system preserves all four biblically mandated principles simultaneously. Capitalism, minimally defined, is therefore unique in leaving intact the full moral space Scripture assumes.


IV. Biblical Critique of Capitalist Abuses

Scripture sharply condemns economic practices that violate justice, including:

  • Exploitation of labor (Jas. 5:4)

  • Fraud and dishonest scales (Lev. 19:35–36)

  • Oppression of the poor (Prov. 14:31; Amos 5:11)

  • Hoarding wealth without mercy (Luke 12:15; Jas. 5:1–3)

  • Idolatry of riches (Matt. 6:24)

These critiques target violations of moral law, not the existence of markets or property itself.


V. A Biblically Faithful Solution Within Capitalism

Scripture’s solution to economic injustice is not the abolition of property or markets but their moral discipline. A biblically faithful capitalist order would therefore include:

  • Enforcement against theft, fraud, and coercion (Exod. 22:1–15)

  • Just treatment and compensation of labor (Deut. 24:14–15)

  • Limits on state power to seize property without moral cause (1 Kings 21; Mic. 2:1–2)

  • Voluntary generosity rather than coerced redistribution (2 Cor. 9:6–7)

  • Recognition that surplus entails moral obligation (Deut. 15:7–11)

Virtue is cultivated through moral agency, not imposed through economic coercion.


Conclusion

When capitalism is defined in its minimal, essential form, it emerges not as a rival to biblical ethics but as the only economic framework that fully accommodates them. Scripture assumes private property, voluntary exchange, accumulation, and lawful profit, while rigorously regulating their use. Moral opposition to capitalism as such therefore lacks biblical foundation, even as Scripture provides robust resources for critiquing capitalist abuses. The task of a biblical economy is not to replace capitalism with a system that negates moral agency, but to discipline economic life within the moral boundaries Scripture already provides. Capitalism—permitted but not sanctified—remains compatible with, and constrained by, the demands of biblical justice, stewardship, and love of neighbor.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Biblical Principles for Addressing the Magistrate


Respectful Criticism and Moral Speech: A Biblical and Civic Perspective

By Rev. William M. Brennan, TH.D.

In a free society, citizens are granted the right to speak openly about their government and its leaders. In the United States, this right flows from the principle that government exists of the people, by the people, and for the people. Yet while civic law protects free speech, Scripture provides moral guidance on how that speech should be exercised. The Bible draws an important distinction between respectful criticism and reviling or slander, a distinction that remains vital for believers living within a democratic system.

The biblical foundation for restraint in speech toward rulers is found in Exodus 22:28, which commands, “You shall not curse a ruler of your people.” This instruction does not depend on the righteousness of the ruler; rather, it establishes a moral boundary against abusive, contemptuous, or slanderous speech. Authority, even when imperfect, is not to be treated with hatred or verbal violence. Speech that curses or reviles corrodes both the speaker and the community.

This principle is reaffirmed in the New Testament in Acts 23:5, where the apostle Paul acknowledges his wrongdoing in speaking harshly to the high priest, saying, “It is written, ‘You shall not speak evil of a ruler of your people.’” Paul’s response is significant because it comes even as he faces unjust treatment. His submission to Scripture demonstrates that respect for authority is a matter of obedience to God, not agreement with human leaders.

At the same time, Scripture does not call for blind silence or passive acceptance of injustice. Romans 13 teaches that governing authorities exist by God’s permission and are meant to promote good and restrain evil. This passage emphasizes order, responsibility, and respect, but it does not prohibit moral discernment or truthful critique. Throughout the Bible, prophets rebuked kings and rulers for injustice, idolatry, and abuse of power. Their criticism, however, was rooted in truth, righteousness, and accountability—not insult or slander.

This biblical framework aligns closely with the American civic tradition. Citizens in the United States possess the legal right to criticize government policies and leaders. Such criticism is essential to accountability and reform in a representative democracy. However, the existence of a legal right does not eliminate moral responsibility. While the Constitution protects free speech, Scripture calls believers to exercise that freedom with wisdom, humility, and self-control.

Therefore, a clear distinction must be maintained. Respectful criticism—grounded in truth, concern for justice, and love of neighbor—is both biblically permissible and civically necessary. Reviling, slander, and insult, though often protected by law, violate the spirit of biblical teaching and undermine constructive discourse. Words have power, and Scripture consistently warns that careless or malicious speech reveals the condition of the heart.

In conclusion, Christians living in a democratic society are called to honor both civic responsibility and biblical morality. We may—and sometimes must—criticize our government. But we must do so without cursing, slandering, or reviling those in authority. Free speech grants the right to speak; Scripture teaches the responsibility to speak rightly. Upholding this balance allows believers to engage the public square with integrity, truth, and respect.


Divine Voluntarism, Moral Knowledge, and the Image of God: A Critical Assessment of Gordon H. Clark’s Theology

 by Rev. William M. Brennan, TH.D. Introduction Gordon H. Clark is widely recognized for his rigorous defense of divine sovereignty, scri...