John William Baier's
                        _Compendium of Positive Theology_
                           Edited by C. F. W. Walther
                                 Published by:
                 St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1877 


         [Translator's Preface. These are the major loci or topics of        
         John William Baier's _Compendium of Positive Theology_ as ed-
         ited by Dr. C. F. W. Walther. These should be seen as the
         broad outline of Baier-Walther's dogmatics, but please don't
         assume that this is all. Each locus usually includes copious
         explanatory notes and citations from patristics and other
         Lutheran dogmaticians.]



                                  Prolegomena

                                  Chapter One

       On the nature and definition of theology

       1.  "Theology," in the meaning of the word, designates precisely
       "the word concerning God," that is, the word or knowledge about
       God.  However from the way this word is normally used it brings in
       the aptitude [habitus] of knowing God and divine things and
       teaching, confirming  and defending them, which agrees with the
       object of theology and in humans is consistent with the state of
       this life.

       2. True theology for men in this life, because of a double
       principle of knowing, is two-fold, Natural and revealed. The first
       one is supported by the light of nature, the second by supernatural
       manifestation or revelation. Both are about God, not only what he
       is in himself, but also as he is the goal and the highest good to
       humans.

       3. Natural theology is a knowledge, and indeed a practice, in which
       there occurs a goal, a subject of the operation and a cause and a
       method, likewise a material object and a formal object.

       4. The goal (to which ultimately and in itself it tends, and all
       things which it teaches, which natural theology refers to) is the
       ultimate blessedness of humans, by which in God's name we are
       embraced; as an objective goal, both the consequence and its
       product, and as the formal goal, consisting in the most perfect
       operation of intellect and will.

       5. The subject of the operation is the human pilgrim or the human
       tending toward eternal blessedness.

       6. To the cause of blessedness is referred (1) the effecting cause,
       which is God, (2) the internal motivating cause, which is the
       goodness or free favor of God.

       7. The means of following blessedness in natural theology are the
       act of mind and will occupied about God, by which rightly God is
       recognized and worshipped. It is designated by the one name
       "religion." It is limited by the law of nature or morals, and
       partly it is occupied directly and immediately about God, partly
       directly man to himself, or to the nearest creature, however it is
       arranged consequently to God.

       8. Truly how far this cult of the divine is sufficient, which
       natural theology prescribes, as it follows in order to the
       blessedness after this life, the greatest and most careful
       diversity occurs and is observed,  just as the state of humans are
       diverse, the youthful state or purity, or the state of corruption
       or sin. In that former state humans were able, by the leading of
       natural theology and through the concession of their own power, to
       attain to a sufficient knowledge of God and the worship owed to
       God, standing before Him without defect or sin, and so far in this
       way to obtain eternal blessedness from God. In this later state
       however through the condition of the corrupt nature itself humans
       are inclined to turn from God and to those things which displease
       God; whoever has a hostile God toward themselves on account of sin,
       he does not find in natural theology a means, by which he is able
       to satisfy God gladly and to be led back in grace with Him; on the
       contrary, he is not able to offer those things, which otherwise
       relate to the worship of God, to perfectly know Him and to set it
       down in writing, nor his worship, which he knows by the power of
       the light of nature to be owed to God. From which it is clear that
       for the present state natural theology is not sufficient for the
       salvation of any human.

       9. Sometimes natural theology, as far as its principles, and also
       as far as the conclusions which hang from them, is altogether true
       and certain, and sometimes it is not opposed to the truths of
       revealed religion, and natural religion is allowed, just as people
       after the fall are caught in acts of sin, to be contaminated by
       prejudgement and various errors.

       10. The formal object of natural theology, as a practical science,
       is the goal, and it is the object or God, in so far as it is
       learned from the light of nature before demonstration, through the
       knowledge which is inborn, or a certain light of the in born
       intellect and instinct of nature, also a vulgar or common
       "acquiring" from an inspection of creatures.

       11. To the material object they apply the subject of the operation,
       and the end following the cause and the means, but on the contrary
       in his way also the end itself, with the formal object, also the
       object of the operation, in so far indeed as this is known
       precisely through demonstration.

       12. The parts of natural theology are three: First about the goal,
       second about the subject of the operation, and third about the
       principles and means.

       13. Natural theology can be described (because it is a practical
       science) from the principles of nature about God, prescribing,
       explaining, confirming and defending to human pilgrims the
       appropriate worship of God, and the things following from God and
       the cause by God of eternal blessedness.

       14. As we are instructed rightly about revealed theology, before
       all things it is necessary to be certain, to be given a certain
       supernatural divine revelation. However, this is not so much for
       us, who are born in the church, but also it exists for the
       gentiles.

       15. However the aptitude of revealed theology is knowledge, if not
       thus said first or rigorously, at least in broader significance, and
       indeed is a practical knowledge.

       16. The goal of revealed theology is two-fold: Internal, which
       consists in the actions of knowing the object of theology, not in
       any way, but in so far as they are accurately explained, confirmed
       and defended, for the cause of faith and human salvation: and
       external, which is itself faith and human salvation, and which are
       joined with faith.

       17. The external goal is usually distinguished as to the ultimate
       goal and the intermediate goal. Further, both are distinguished in
       object and form. The object is God, infinitely perfect and
       supremely good. The formal is a certain operation about God, by
       which we possess and have the benefit of it as by the highest good.
       And the objective goal of both the ultimate and intermediate is
       one.  Truly the formal goal is different, one thing if talking
       about the ultimate goal, another if talking about the intermediate.

       18. Certainly the ultimate formal goal consists in the intuitive
       and clear knowledge of God, and likewise by the intuitive love of
       God by the most intense knowledge.

       19. The intermediate formal goal is faith in Christ, as the cause
       of the accomplishing grace from God. However then to the same place
       pertains the love of God, as to us being reconciled; on the
       contrary there is also an action to another, by which divine
       goodness we are given back a participation: and in this way a total
       holiness of life.

       20. The subject of the operation is man the sinner, in so far as he
       is being led to eternal life.

       21. The efficient cause of the ultimate formal end is the triune
       God.

       22. The internal impulsive cause is the goodness of God; and the
       external impulsive cause is the earned merit of Christ.

       23. But also faith in Christ is rightly reckoned as a saving cause.

       24. And because faith is not attributed to men unless it is applied
       by God, who teaches that faith through word and sacraments, as
       through instruments he produces and confirms such faith; therefore
       also the word and sacraments are also rightly numbered among the
       causes of salvation.

       25. The object of revealed theology is two-fold: Material and
       formal.  The material object is the content [lit. res] of
       revelation, which is known in revealed theology. And this applies
       not so much to the subject of the operation and the cause and means
       of the following goal, but also the goal itself, in so far as it is
       known by the aptitude of theology. The formal object, or principle
       and ground of knowing, from where also the knowledge of things
       come, things which are put forward in revealed theology, is divine
       revelation.

       26. The material object is distinguished in what is believed and in
       what is done. The believing things are said to be that of which
       thus faith exists, so that formally they are not direct operations
       by previous practical acts: however they are believed from this, by
       those who have arrived at salvation; e.g. God loving the human
       race, Christ being the son of God and son of man, etc. The name of
       the things being done is understood themselves as describing the
       operations of theology by practical actions, also as it happened
       the aptitude of transferring to an operation, or acquiring through
       an operation, if not following the cause of salvation, however, not
       healthily we forget these actions; e.g., the actual and habitual
       apprehension of the merits of Christ, which we call faith, the
       actual and habitual love, by which we love God, Christ, and our
       neighbor, the hope of eternal life, etc.

       27. What is believed is otherwise called the articles of faith,
       which in a wider understanding are divided (1) in articles pure and
       mixed, (2) and in articles of faith fundamental and non-fundamental.

       28. The articles of faith are called pure, which are especially
       understood from divine revelations: such is the article about the
       holy Trinity, about the incarnation of the Son of God, and others.
       Mixed articles are said to be those, which not alone from
       revelation, but are also consistent with the truth according to the
       light of nature: e.g., the article about the existence of God, and
       about the divine attributes.

       29. Articles of faith are fundamental, which as they cause the
       aptitude towards the foundations of faith and salvation, so that
       for salvation they are not possible to ignore or at least to deny.
       However the foundation of faith is said to be with that thing, by
       which the faith and salvation of people are supported, and it is
       Christ, in so far as he is the cause of our salvation: also
       doctrine, by which that thing, on which faith is leaning, is held
       together; and it is a complex of many propositions of divine
       revelations, which cause a certain aptitude towards salvation. That
       foundation is real or substantial, and this foundation is called
       dogmatic by authors.

       30. The fundamental articles of faith are distinguished as primary
       and secondary.

       31. The primary articles of faith are commonly said to be those
       which for salvation, faith and health are not able to be denied,
       but also are not able to be ignored.

       32. The primary articles are able to be distinguished in another
       way, that the thing signified by them is about the inward plan of
       the real foundation: e.g., the article about Christ the God-man,
       also the article about Christ's merits and satisfactions for our
       sins; and in another way that the thing signified by them, is not
       permitted to be about the internal plan of a real foundation,
       however it is connected most tightly with it, thus that, unless it
       is clearly understood, the other appropriate things of those
       foundations have not been leading toward the point of generating
       and sustaining saving faith: e.g., the article about God and from
       there the point about Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the article
       about the gracious will of God, which wishes all humans to be
       saved, the article about sin, by which we are defiled, and by God
       are delivered to hatred and are worthy of punishment, the article
       about justification or the remission of sins obtained through
       Christ, and then faith, through which the remission of sins is
       obtained, about the blessed life, which they have tried to gain,
       who by the gracious God have departed from this life.

       33. The secondary fundamental articles are usually described as
       parts of Christian doctrine, which are permitted to be ignored by
       the sound foundation of salvation: however they are not possible to
       be denied by that sound foundation. Such are the articles about the
       characteristic properties of the divine persons, about the clearly
       observed union of persons, and the communication of attributes in
       Christ, about original sin, about the decree of the final election
       in view of faith, about justification through faith alone, apart
       from the merit of works, etc., which articles even if the knowledge
       is not easy for the faith of simple ones, however a denial of them
       on the part of a denier is not able to stand with faith and
       salvation, unless because of a vast simplicity on their part and an
       ignorance of the consequences of the denial, through which the
       denial is turned away from the foundation of faith itself through
       the consequences, and the spirit intercedes from error, which is
       turned directly away from the foundation of faith, shrinking back
       and prepared to admit a better interpretation.

       34. The non-fundamental articles are said to be those which for the
       saving foundation of faith people are not only able to ignore, but
       also to deny, or in each part to dispute. E.g., about the sin and
       perpetual rejection of certain angels, about the immorality of the
       first people before the Fall, about the AntiChrist, about the
       origin of spirits through creation or transference (lit.,
       traducem), etc.

       35. The object of formal theology is divine revelation, through
       which it performs its office, which affects, influences and stirs
       the human will, so that it orders the assent of the intellect.

       36. And from there it is established, that theology is an aptitude
       supernatural in its substance, by our actions indeed, but through
       men of grace and acquired through the operation of the Holy Spirit.

       37. However theology is distinguished from faith, so that including
       from it, because it is included. For theology beyond faith also
       implies the faculty of explaining and confirming those things which
       are revealed.

       38. Theology is able to be defined, as a practical knowledge,
       teaching, confirming and defending everything from divine
       revelation, doing this to human sinners when they are known to
       faith in Christ, then when these things are made necessary to
       sanctity of life, following from God and in God they are the cause
       of eternal blessedness.

       39. The parts of revealed theology are arranged according to
       analytic order, so that first is drawn out, what is about the goal,
       then what is about the subject of the operation, and then what
       applies to the causes and means.




       _________________________________.__________________________________ 
                                       
       This text was translated by Rev. Theodore Mayes and is copyrighted         
       material, (c)1996, but is free for non-commercial use or distribu-
       tion, and especially for use on Project Wittenberg. Please direct 
       any comments or suggestions to: Rev. Robert E. Smith of the Walther
       Library at Concordia Theological Seminary.

                         E-mail: smithre@mail.ctsfw.edu

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