A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Incarnation: plan A or plan B?

I’ve never really given much thought to the medieval debate between Franciscans and Dominicans about whether the Incarnation would’ve taken place if humankind hadn’t sinned. I guess it always struck me as a classically “scholastic” debate (in the pejorative sense).

But now I’m not so sure. It seems that which position one takes could have important implications about the meaning of salvation among other things. On the Franciscan view, as exemplified by Duns Scotus, the Incarnation was God’s plan from the beginning and would’ve taken place even without sin. It was God’s way of communicating the divine life and entering into fellowship with God’s creatures. The Incarnation, on this view, is the whole point of creation. By contrast, the Dominican view, as held by St. Thomas, was that the Incarnation was primarily a response to sin. Thus atonement becomes the chief reason for the Incarnation.

Laying aside the exegetical question of which view comports better with the biblical witness, the Franciscan view seems to incorporate some attractive elements which the typical western penal or satisfaction view of the Incarnation has at times overlooked. For one, it emphasizes God’s love rather than God’s wrath, as at least some popular versions of satisfaction theory tend to do. Secondly, it seems more congenial to the “cosmic” aspect of slavation that we see, e.g. in Ephesians and Colossians. In the Incarnation God “pitches his tent” in creation and gathers all things in Christ in order to unite them to himself.

Presumably, though, atonement, in the sense of restoring the broken relationship between God and human beings remains a central, if not the central, part of Christ’s work. Maybe we should say that, under the conditions of sin, communicating the divine presence requires the work of atonement, even if it’s something God would’ve done anyway.

3 responses to “Incarnation: plan A or plan B?”

  1. I’ve always found this a fascinating topic. Strictly speaking, the Dominican view wasn’t that the Incarnation took place primarily as a response to sin, but that going farther than that is merely speculation; taken strictly, for instance, the creeds do seem to imply that God became man chiefly to redeem us from sin. Aquinas, for instance, allows that the Incarnation might have happened even if we had not sinned, but holds that, given Scripture and the creeds, we are on safer and more certain ground if we say that Christ became Incarnate for our sins. This still allows the Word to be central to the divine plan, but just allows doubt about whether He would have been central as Incarnate if we had not sinned. (Aquinas would agree with the suggestion in your last paragraph; see the reply to the first objection at the above link.) Scotus on the other hand, develops an argument that Christ’s predestination is prior to all creation, and therefore that the Incarnation is first in God’s creative intention.

  2. St. Thomas distinguishes between two purposes of the Incarnation. One is for reparation, the other for complete glorification. He argues that before sinning Adam and Eve knew of the Incarnation insofar as it was to bring about humanity’s perfect glorification. They did not know of it as a reparation for sin:

    “[B]efore the state of sin, man believed, explicitly in Christ’s Incarnation, in so far as it was intended for the consummation of glory, but not as it was intended to deliver man from sin by the Passion and Resurrection, since man had no foreknowledge of his future sin. He does, however, seem to have had foreknowledge of the Incarnation of Christ, from the fact that he said (Genesis 2:24): “Wherefore a man shall leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife,” of which the Apostle says (Ephesians 5:32) that “this is a great sacrament . . . in Christ and the Church,” and it is incredible that the first man was ignorant about this sacrament.”

    So it seems that in the very making of man, God included making Himself man.

  3. Thanks for the helpful clarifications. I figured I was oversimplifying things a bit.

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