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Home/Biblical and Theological/Proverbs 8:23, the Eternal Generation of the Son and the History of Reformed Exegesis

Proverbs 8:23, the Eternal Generation of the Son and the History of Reformed Exegesis

The Wisdom of God in Proverbs 8: Is this merely a metaphorical personification of an attribute of God? Or, is it referring specifically to one of the Persons of the Godhead?

Written by Nick Batzig | Monday, January 16, 2017

“Our argument hence is: ‘Christ, the second person of the Trinity, is spoken of, Prov. 8:23, under the name of Wisdom; now, it is said expressly there of Wisdom that it was ‘ begotten from everlasting:’ and therefore the eternal generation of Christ is hence confirmed.’ Our reasons are:–(1.) Because the things here spoken of can be applied to no other. (2.) Because the very same things are affirmed of Christ, John 1:1. (3.) Because Christ is the Wisdom of God, and so called in the Scripture, not only in the expression of ὁ Λόγος, but ῥητῶς, 1 Cor. 1:30. (4.) That by Wisdom Solomon in- tended the Wisdom of God, and that that word may be supplied, is most evident from what is spoken of it. Let the place be read. (5.) Christ is called not only the “Wisdom of God,” but also Wisdom absolutely and simply; and that not only Prov. 1:20, but Matt. 11:19.2″

 
The debate that raged last year concerning intertrinitarian relations fueled my desire to go back and revisit Richard Muller’s volume on The Triunity of God in his Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics (a volume that I cannot commend strongly enough). In doing so, I happened across a brief yet important section in which Muller gives a survey of the history of the exegesis of certain passages of Scripture that deal specifically with the eternal generation the Son. Most interesting of all is Muller’s treatment of Proverbs 8:23–a passage in which we hear the Wisdom of God saying, “I was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the earth was.” The question about the identity of the Wisdom of God in Proverbs 8 has been of no small significance in the history of theology. Is this merely a metaphorical personification of an attribute of God? Or, is it referring specifically to one of the Persons of the Godhead? These questions, of course, must be answered in light of the insistence of those, who–while rejecting historic orthodox Christianity–have heretically intimated that this verse speaks of the creation of the Son of God?

In the brief section in which he gives consideration to these questions, Muller concludes that the Reformed exegesis of Proverbs 8:23 proves that this passage “does indeed refer to the second person of the Trinity ‘under the name of Wisdom’ and that the text does in fact indicate that the divine wisdom is ‘begotten from everlasting.'” He then proceeds to explain the reasoning process of the Reformed when he writes:

“Solomon clearly intended to refer to the wisdom of God–although the text does not specify the phrase, the meaning ought to be obvious. This wisdom, moreover, was with God ‘in the beginning of his way, before his works of old’ (Prov. 8:22), which is affirmed in much the same way of Christ as divine Word in John 1:1. What is said of Wisdom in Proverbs 8, moreover, cannot be said of anyone other than the second person of the Trinity–and Christ is called the wisdom of God ‘in Scripture, not only in the expression of ὁ Λόγος, but ῥητῶς [specifically], 1 Cor. 1:30,’ and is so called ‘absolutely and simply’ in Matthew 11:19. The whole chapter in Proverbs, moreover, clearly speaks of wisdom as a ‘person.’ As for the Hebrew word olam, the Reformed argument is precisely the same as presented with reference to Micah 5:2: the word can and should be rendered as ‘eternal’ or ‘from everlasting’–particularly so in Proverbs 8:23, where ‘everlasting, from the beginning’ is explained by the phrase in the preceding verse ‘the Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way, before his works of old’ and by the entire remaining passage (vv. 24-29), where clearly this wisdom is said to exist before the creation itself.”1

Muller sets the Reformed exegesis of Proverbs 8:23 as over against the teaching of The Racovian Catechism–a Socinian document that attempts to deny the eternal generation of the Son from Proverbs 8:23. Muller repeatedly draws on John Owen’s Vindiciæ Evangelicæ, where Owen states, in no uncertain terms, that Proverbs 8 explicitly teaches the eternal generation of the Son of God:

“Our argument hence is: ‘Christ, the second person of the Trinity, is spoken of, Prov. 8:23, under the name of Wisdom; now, it is said expressly there of Wisdom that it was ‘ begotten from everlasting:’ and therefore the eternal generation of Christ is hence confirmed.’ Our reasons are:–(1.) Because the things here spoken of can be applied to no other. (2.) Because the very same things are affirmed of Christ, John 1:1. (3.) Because Christ is the Wisdom of God, and so called in the Scripture, not only in the expression of ὁ Λόγος, but ῥητῶς, 1 Cor. 1:30. (4.) That by Wisdom Solomon in- tended the Wisdom of God, and that that word may be supplied, is most evident from what is spoken of it. Let the place be read. (5.) Christ is called not only the “Wisdom of God,” but also Wisdom absolutely and simply; and that not only Prov. 1:20, but Matt. 11:19.2

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Related Posts:

  • What Is Eternal Generation?
  • What Does Fear Have to Do with Wisdom?
  • Eternal Processions
  • Wisdom Isn’t About Right or Wrong; It’s About Left or Right
  • Why Heart Posture Matters

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