Presuppositional apologetics has had a difficult time breaking into the mainstream of Christian apologetics. It is easy to see why, when is largely the discovery of Cornelius Van Til, who though a brilliant thinker, is a difficult writer to grasp. He is intellectually challenging, and frankly, out of the intellectual range of most people.
There have been many attempts to popularize him. I’ve read Greg Bahnsen’s Van Til’s Apologetic and John Frame’s Cornelius Van Til: An Analysis of His Thought, both of which are two of the most popular works on Van Til. The trouble with these two works is they are still geared toward the academy, and are very challenging works. There have been other attempts at popularizing presuppositional apologetics, but for one reason or another, none of them seem to have the far reaching effect that is needed to bring presuppositional apologetics into the mainstream. Enter Scott Oliphint’s Covenantal Apologetics.
This book has received a broad range of exposure on the internet in the last few months and Crossway has gone to great lengths to market the book and widen its appeal. It is easy to see why, as Oliphint has taken great effort to make this book the kind of broad introduction to the method as any I’ve seen.
To begin with, Oliphint has proposed a new name for the method. Presuppositional is a descriptive term, but it is a bit philosophical and Oliphint argues it has worn out its uses. Instead, he proposes “covenantal apologetics.” The “covenantal” comes from Van Til’s argument that all men are in a covenantal relationship with God—either through Adam or through Christ. Those in covenant through Adam are covenant breakers, those in covenant with Christ are covenant keepers. As Oliphint says, “it assumes, in each case, a relationship to God.” (Page 32) It is this relationship that is central to the apologetic that Oliphint faithfully exposits, drawn from Van Til.
If all men are in a relationship with God, all men know God. If all men know God, all are responsible for their covenant relationship with God. Those who suppress the truth of their knowledge of God, are still responsible for what they do know. This also means that the common ground between the believer and unbeliever, the covenant keeper and covenant breaker, is the knowledge of God.
Evidentialists, rather, seek for common ground in reason. But covenantal apologetics argues that there is no common ground in reason. Reason is either the possession of the covenant keeper through the Holy Spirit, or the common-grace gift, which allows the covenant breaker to function in God’s world, despite his otherwise suppression of the truth of God’s sovereignty over creation. Reason is not a neutral position—there is no neutrality!
All Christians already believe in the truthfulness of the Christian gospel. So, if “Christianity is true, so anything opposing it is false.” (Page 27) This fundamental belief is often cast aside in apologetic encounters, in an attempt to begin with common ground—but the only common ground is the universal knowledge of God.
The reason of covenant breakers is autonomous human reason—and is inherently unwilling to submit to the truth they already know, of God’s existence and sovereignty. Their reason has already rejected God, why would we believe that we could put evidence before them to persuade them of the truth? They know the truth, they won’t submit to it, and they suppress it.
Oliphint connects this knowledge to Calvin’s sensus divinitatis (sense of deity). He writes, “It is this all-important truth—the truth that all people, because made in God’s image, know God—that provides the ‘point of contact’ between what we as Christians believe and espouse and what anyone else might believe and espouse.” (Page 129)
The evidentialist approach has been “unduly dependent” upon rationalism, empiricism, and the Kantian synthesis. (Page 137) What has been abandoned is the Scriptures as the foundational source of truth. Oliphint argues this, Reformational principle, is the bedrock belief: “The dilemma is obvious. There simply cannot be sufficient evidential propositions ad infinitum. There has to be some ‘place’—some proposition, some concept, some idea, some foundation of authority—that is sufficient to carry the conceptual weight of what we claim to know, believe, and hold.” With Scripture as the “the proper foundation for everything else that we claim to know or believe,” we have that which nothing can “go behind.” As he writes, “Any ‘going behind’ would necessarily show that there is something more foundational on which Scripture must rest.” (Page 128-129)
This is all introductory to the work, as it is in chapter four where Oliphint begins to show his true purpose in the book. He argues that all apologetics must be persuasive. This is not to say that is the goal, as he later argues, “Our goal in a covenantal apologetic cannot be the conversion of those to whom we speak. That is a goal that we cannot accomplish. It is our prayer, but should not be our goal. Rather, our goal is to communicate, as persuasively as we are able, the truth of God himself, as that truth finds its focus in the Word who became flesh and dwelt among us.” (Page 159) Instead, what he means, is that apologetics is centered on Scripture, and not evidences or proofs. We aren’t trying to pile up evidence in our favor, so much as demonstrate the truthfulness of the gospel and the falsity of all else.
He uses Aristotle’s trivium of rhetoric, ethos, pathos, and logos to show his apologetic method. Ethos is “generally, one’s character.” (Page 139) We are to be holy—that is beyond reproach—gentle and respectful. This aspect of our apologetic is not flexible. We must act as Christians in our apologetic interactions.
Pathos is our understanding of “how those to whom we may speak might feel.” It is our “proper and personal understanding of those to whom we speak.” Pathos is our understanding and relationship to our audience. It will depend entirely on who our audience is and our relationship to them. As he writes, “In persuasion, it is the task of the speaker properly to construe his audience, with a view toward communication that is ‘adequate to the occasion.’” (Page 146) Oliphint spends a great deal of time here, as this is perhaps the most important aspect of the apologetic—knowing how to properly relate to our audience.
Logos, is, of course, the “word” or message we are communicating. This is dictated by Scripture. We must be faithful to the Bible in communicating the Bible. Hence, we must be faithful in the proper handling of the Word.
Once Oliphint lays out his method, he then applies it to some specific scenarios. He begins with the problem of evil, and he interacts with Alvin Plantiga’s response to the classic apologetical “problem.” He even has a lengthy sample dialogue with an “atheist objector.”
He moves on to write of the “wisdom” and the “Spirit of Persuasion” and has another sample interaction with Daniel Dennett’s writings in Darwin’s Dangerous Idea. He ends the book by applying the covenantal apologetic method to false religion—specifically Islam. Here he interacts with a Muslim influenced by Muhammed Abduh’s The Theology of Unity.
While the sample interactions, two with atheists, and one with a Muslim, are helpful, they are not necessarily the most relevant for the average layman. All three interactions are with high-caliber intellectuals, and are necessarily complex and philosophical. Yes, the principles may be applied broadly, but are our typical apologetical encounters going to be with those with Ph.Ds?
My single greatest appreciation of the book is its explicit Scriptural grounding—particularly in his exposition of God’s name, “I AM.” Oliphint grounds God’s aseity in this name that God tells to Moses. How are we to arrive at God by any other means than by his self-revelation? This God who “Is who He is” may not be argued to, or “proven.” Who is qualified to be a judge—God, or man? (Pages 58-60)
While I appreciated this, I would have liked to see Oliphint discuss the significance of God swearing by himself. This is another demonstration of God’s aseity. It shows that God alone can be the foundation to all knowledge. If we abandon God’s self-revelation, what other grounding do we have?
The book is solid, surely not everything everyone will want. But it does faithfully lay out the presuppositional apologetics in a straightforward manner, that will surely make the method more understandable, and hopefully put to greater use.