I believe the moderators/administrators should make it absolutely clear that condemning Nicene orthodoxy as blasphemous and heretical will not be tolerated on the Puritan Board...By all means let us discuss the Trinity and even the erroneous views of Reymond, but let us do so from WITHIN the confines of the Christian faith.
So, it's not possible for Nicea to be wrong, even in principle? Nicea is so sacrosanct that not only can it not be changed, it cannot even be questioned? That anyone who challenges the Nicene Creed at this point (or at any other point, for that matter) is always and automatically wrong? Even Warfield? Even Murray?
And how do
you know that Reymond's views are erroneous? Have you made a thorough investigation of the matter? Or are you just automatically assuming that Reymond
must be wrong because he disagrees with Nicea?
And, yes, the Westminster divines included "begotten" language in their secondary standards. But, did they do so because they were convinced - from Scripture - that eternal generation is biblical? Or did they incorporate that language merely because it was there to be incorporated from previous documents - theological boilerplate, so to speak, that they were merely passing along? Is there any way we can know what the divines thought at this point?
The point I am trying to make, with all due respect, is that men such as Warfield, Murray, Boettner, etc., and me (and I'm
certainly not putting myself at the same level as those men) are not convinced that eternal generation is actually found in Scripture, but that it is not permissible to question the doctrine, not because it is or isn't found in the Bible, but because it
is found in various creeds and confessions, which apparently means the end of all discussion.
I sincerely adhere to the Westminster Standards. I think they are marvellously wonderful and succinct condensations of the Bible's theology. But,
at this particular point, I think their theology is offbase.
I think it's good to adhere to the secondary standards.
But it's more important to be loyal to the Scriptures. No creed or confession is infallible or inerrant - even in principle. (And this is something that even the Westminster Confession of Faith admits about itself.) Those terms are to be applied to the Scriptures alone. If the Westminster Confession is willing to admit that it might be wrong about something, why is it apparently so evil to say that any secondary standard might be wrong?
Yes, we adhere to secondary standards; but, out of loyalty to the Scriptures, and the God of those Scriptures, we dare not practice such adherence unquestioningly. To do so is to place such standards above the Scriptures, in my opinion.