JOHN FLETCHER'S METHODOLOGY IN
THE ANTINOMIAN CONTROVERSY OF 1770-76
ROBERT A. MATTKE, B.D., M.A.
(Head of Religion Department, Miltonvale College)
For over two centuries, the name of John Wesley has been highly honored. He is the
acknowledged leader of the Evangelical Revival and is credited with founding the Methodist
Church and giving to it a distinctive theology. Many other deserving tributes could be
paid this man. With-out detracting from Wesley's accomplishments, it needs to be
remembered that he had some very able assistants who made helpful contributions to his
success. Today's evangelistic association is not wholly a twentieth century phenomenon.
Admittedly, the team which John Wesley headed was small when measured by today's
standards. Ernst Sommer points out that by 1765 it was recognized that at the head of
Methodism was a "troika" or, as he calls it, a triumvirate, John and Charles
Wesley and John Fletcher. Luke Tyerman, the biographer of early Methodism, writes:
John Wesley traveled, formed societies, and governed them. Charles Wesley composed
unequalled hymns for the Methodists to sing; and John Fletcher, a native of Calvinian
Switzerland explained, elaborated and defended the doctrines they heartily believed. (1)
Unfortunately, this third man on Wesley's team is a veritable stranger to many Wesleyan
theologians, and this unfamiliarity with John Fletcher in contemporary Wesleyan circles is
regrettable.
Those historians who have not overlooked the significance of the mutual efforts of
those associated with John Wesley describe Fletcher as the "earliest and fullest
expositor and interpreter in English of the Remonstrant Theology of Arminius; whose works
remain the storehouse of its treasures and the armoury of its defense." (2) Another
claims that the theology of the Methodist movement was the theology of John Fletcher of
Madeley. (3) Abel Stevens, one of the leading historians of Methodism, has written of
Fletcher's Checks: "They have been more influential in the denomination than Wesley's
own controversial writings on the subject. They have influenced, indirectly through
Methodism, the subsequent tone of theological thought in much of the Protestant world. (4)
Some writers have seen fit to call Fletcher "the theologian of Methodism" or
"the chief theologian of the Wesleyans." (5)
Wesley, who was always judicious in the giving of praise, readily acknowledges his
indebtedness to John Fletcher. Wesley enjoined: "Let all our preachers carefully read
over ours and Mr. Fletcher's tracts." (6) The esteem with which Wesley held Fletcher
was such that on two different occasions, once in 1773 and again in 1776, Wesley tried to
persuade Fletcher to become his successor.
The following reasons partially explain the scant attention paid to Fletcher today: the
general theological pauperism in Wesleyan circles; Fletcher's Works are not readily
available; few students understand the historical context in which he wrote and,
unfortunately, Fletcher's name bears a stigma because it is associated with controversy. A
failure to understand Fletcher's methodology poses an additional hindrance. The purpose of
this paper is to make some contribution to our understanding at this point.
John Fletcher's significant contribution to Wesleyan-Arminian theology came about as a
result of his participation in the Antinomian controversy. As the Evangelical Revival
progressed, it soon became apparent that there were two branches simultaneously
developing, one Calvinistic, the other Arminian. In 1770 at the twenty-seventh annual
conference of preachers, the following statement was made by Wesley: "We have leaned
too much toward Calvinism." (7)
This statement caused what was smoldering to burst into the open flame of the
Antinomian controversy. Lady Huntingdon was greatly offended by the minutes of the 1770
Conference and believed that the fundamental truths of the gospel were put in jeopardy by
them. Walter Shirley, Henry Venn, Richard and Roland Hill and others aligned themselves
with Lady Huntingdon. Until 1770, John Fletcher had been much admired by Lady Huntingdon;
so much so, in fact, that she had made him president of Trevecca College which she had
founded in 1768. Now, because of their theological differences, Fletcher found it
necessary to resign the presidency of this college.
It was after this breach in fellowship that Fletcher took up his ready pen and began to
write his memorable Checks to Antinomianism. Not only did he write out of a sense of "duty towards God," and towards his "honored father in Christ, Mr. Wesley,
and his misunderstood minutes," (0) but because of a deep-seated concern for the
welfare of the revival. He stated his chief reason for publishing his first Check thus:
It appears if I am not mistaken that we stand now as much in need of a reformation from
antinomianism as our ancestors did of a reformation from popery. People, it seems, may now
be 'in Christ' without being 'new creatures,' without casting 'old things' away. They may
be God's children without God's image; and 'born of the Spirit' without the fruits of the
Spirit. (9)
Thus it was that Fletcher was firmly convinced that in evangelical Christianity you
could not separate the faith of a Christian from the fruitage of a Christian life.
Fletcher, like Wesley, was supremely interested in practical Christianity. (10)
Before we consider the methods Fletcher employed in the Antinomian controversy, it must
be understood that his methodology was not in any way conditioned by blind partisanship,
or by an element of surprise at what was developing in the Methodist Societies. He was not
baffled by the sudden emergence of what might be falsely called a "new heresy".
You cannot detect any frustration on his part as to what the solution must be. Fletcher
did not consider controversy to be a necessarily evil thing. His position was that
"controversy, though not desirable in itself, yet, properly managed, has a hundred
times rescued truth, groaning under the lash of triumphant error." (11)
Though emotions ran rampant at times, Fletcher retained his poise and always manifested
a tender spirit. He submitted his First Check to Wesley before it was published so that
all "tart" expressions might be removed from it. Wesley recorded his evaluation
of Fletcher's Checks with these words:
One knows not which to admire most - the purity of the language, the strength and
clearness of the argument, or the mildness and sweetness of the spirit that breathes
throughout the whole. (12)
Throughout the controversy, Fletcher demonstrated that he was a man of both sobriety
and piety.
Fletcher's methodology in the Antinomian controversy was based upon a careful
historical analysis of the problem. He was aware that from the very beginnings of the
Christian era, Antinomianism has always been a threat to the practical fulfilment of the
Christian life as instituted by the New Covenant of Grace. Admittedly, the relationship
between the moral law and the law of grace is not readily evident. Immanuel Kant expressed
this relationship in terms of a mystery by saying: "Two things fill the mind with
ever increasing wonder and awe, the more often and the more intensely the mind of thought
is drawn to them: the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me."
In an attempt to meet the ethical demands of the New Testament, some of the early
Christians turned to mysticism, asceticism, or to any one of a great number of heresies.
(13) By way of example, the Marcionites taught "that the God preached by the Law and
the Prophets, was not the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. The one was known, the other
unknown; the one righteous, and the other good." (14) William James writes: "The
heretics who went before the Reformation are lavishly accused by church writers of
antinomian practices." (15)
It is an accepted fact that by the sixteenth century the predominant emphasis in the
church was upon a "work righteousness." Luther's reaction against this form of
salvation supposedly achieved by means of meritorious works precipitated the Reformation.
Just as the pendulum has the tendency to swing in the opposite direction, so Luther came
dangerously close to an exclusive emphasis upon "faith." At first he found
difficulty in reconciling the emphasis of Paul with that of James, and at this stage he
preferred the teachings of Paul because he did not yet fully understand either Paul or
James. (16) It must be remembered that as Luther recoiled from the theological errors of
his day, his emotions temporarily blinded him to an understanding of how the emphasis of
Paul and James could be reconciled.
More basic to the problem, however, was Luther's proclivity to Augustinianism in which
he had been so thoroughly schooled. Not wanting to detract from Luther's courageous
performance in the Reformation, John Fletcher ventures to say,
He was so busy in opposing the pope of Rome, his indulgences, Latin masses, and other
monastic fooleries, that he did not find time to oppose the Augustinian fooleries of
fatalism, Manichean necessity, lawless grace, and free wrath. (17)
In this period of turmoil, the humanism of Desiderius Erasmus with its emphasis upon
free will failed to be of any help to Luther because it erred on the side of Pelagianism.
Thus an ancient conflict of the early fifth century is renewed. Pelagius, a British
monk, gave great prominence to the ability of man to save himself. St. Augustine was his
chief assailant and fought the Pelagian heresy with an emphasis upon the free grace of
God. In this justifiable controversy, it was Fletcher's judgment that Augustine's view of
grace was not wholly orthodox, especially where it gave rise to predestination. (18) Thus
Augustine's corrective emphasis came short of achieving the equilibrium of the gospel in
describing the God-man relationship.
When Calvin arrived on the Reformation scene, he likewise failed to find a mediating
position with regard to the "holy doctrines of grace, and the gracious doctrines of
justice." (19) His Augustinian teachings continued to aggravate the controversy in
which Luther and Erasmus had been the chief disputants. The first reformer to balance the
"Gospel ., axioms was, according to the viewpoint of John Fletcher, the English
reformer Thomas Cranmer who had written these lines:
All men be monished and chiefly preachers, that, in this high matter, they, looking on
both sides (i.e. looking both to the doctrines of grace and the doctrines of justice), so
attemper and moderate themselves, that neither they so preach the grace of God (with
heated Augustine), that they take away thereby free-will, nor on the other side so extol
free-will (with heated Pelagius), that injury be done to the grace of God. (20)
Because of the Augustinian sentiments in Reformation circles on the continent, the
Roman Catholics in launching the counter-reformation soft-pedaled their veneration for
Augustine to the extent that following the Council of Trent they became decidedly more
Pelagian. Thus both branches of Western Christendom were driven "still farther from
the line of Scripture moderation." (21) According to Fletcher, the unpleasant result
was:
That in the popish countries, those who stood up for faith and distinguishing free
grace began to be called heretics, Lutherans, and Solifidians: while. in Protestant
countries, those who had the courage to maintain the doctrines of justice, good works, and
unnecessitated obedience, were branded as Papists, merit mongers, and heretics. (22)
In his review of history, Fletcher pointed to the seventeenth century saying that
Arminianism within Protestantism and Jansenism within Roman Catholicism were both
movements whose intention was to check the excesses to which these respective branches of
Christendom were addicted. The Synod of Dort (1618-1619) condemned Arminius for his
leadership in a reaction aimed at scholastic Calvinism's failure to recognize fully the
significance of human responsibility. Cornelius Jansen's attempt to bring into focus the
Augustinian concept of grace especially within the Society of Jesus came to be known as
Jansenism. Although both movements were officially condemned, all was not lost, however,
for as Fletcher observes, "truth shall stand, be it ever so much opposed by either
partial Protestants or partial papists." (23)
Fletcher believed that the problem of antinomianism in early Methodism was quite
properly analogous to a similar problem which confronted the Presbyterians in the
seventeenth century. It is for this reason that Fletcher's Works are replete with
references to the works of the more moderate Puritan or Non-Conformist divines (e.g.,
Richard Baxter, Matthew Henry, John Flavel, Daniel Williams, Philip Doddridge). He also
quotes from Bishop Lancelot Andrewes who represents the so-called Arminians of the
Caroline divines.
Thus it was Fletcher's conclusion that the great central problems of theology change
far less in matter and substance than in form and temper as they appear in history's
successive ages. These problems dress themselves up in a new garb and outwardly they
appear to be transformed. In more recent times, an English scholar verifies Fletcher's
conclusion by saying:
Under the new names of Rationalism and Romanticism, we recognize the old antagonisms of
free-will and predestination which at one era bore the names of Pelagianism and
Augustinianism, and, at another, Arminianism and Calvinism. (24)
Fletcher's incisive study of history convinced him that Antinomianism became a threat
to sound evangelical doctrine whenever the polarity between divine sovereignty and human
responsibility was neutralized. To avoid this subtle pitfall, he believed that responsible
theologians must bring themselves to an acceptance of the paradox.
In most cases, the Christian scholar's background in Aristotelian logic is a serious
handicap in any understanding of the paradox. The natural temptation is to want to relieve
the tension. David Shipley observes that the usual method is to take one truth and explain
it "in terms of the other so that the dialectical tension is lost or lessened
sufficiently to make possible popular uncritical perversion." (25) Thus it is with
ease that the theologian can put an irreconcilable opposition between two equal truths to
the end that he cancels them both out.
After a careful historical analysis of theological movements in the Christian church,
Fletcher develops in the Antinomian controversy a methodology which accepts the reality of
the paradox. Gertrude Huehns categorically states that "research has repeatedly
pointed out that one of the main reasons for the victory of Christianity over other
competing sacrificial mythologies was its paradoxicality." (26)
Accepting the element of paradox and recognizing the difficulty of making clear-cut
distinctives between opposition and complementarity, Fletcher proceeds to develop a
methodology which has been called the "via media", or "the middle
way." In his words he called it, "the harmonious opposition of the
Scriptures." In more recent times this method has been called
"dialectical." (27)
Fletcher's methodology undoubtedly grew out of his peculiar conception of the nature of
Truth, which he maintained is an organic unity. "Truth," he says, "is
confined within her firm bounds; nay, there is a middle line equally distant from all
extremes; on that line she stands, and to miss her, you need only step over it to the
right hand or to the left." (28)
During the course of the Antinomian controversy, Fletcher's dialectical methodology
became the hermeneutical principle which he used in the exegesis of Scripture. When he was
confronted with seeming contradictions in the Scriptures and differences of interpretation
among individual Christians and theological groups, this was the method by which he sought
a reconciliation. For example he cites Romans 4:5 and 5:1 which indicate that man is
justified by faith. It is equally as important that the mind be confronted with John 6:27
which is a command of Jesus Christ to "labor [ergazesthe, literally, 'work'] for the
meat that endureth to everlasting life." (29)
Any proof-text method not balanced by this dialectical methodology was thought by
Fletcher to be potentially dangerous. To him this would be "wresting the Scriptures
to one's own destruction" (I Pet. 3:6).
Fletcher's methodology gave him some keen insights into the Antinomian problem. He was
able to appraise the current situation by saying, "Once we were in immediate danger
of splitting upon 'works without faith': Now we are threatened with destruction from
'faith without works'." (30) He accounts for the fact that Antinomianism had again
raised its ugly head because of Calvinism's one-sided emphasis upon Christ as the
dispenser of grace and thus its preoccupation with only 'the first Gospel axiom," or
justification by faith in the day of salvation. In contradistinction the rigid Arminian
position imprisoned Christ within the context of the law and thus it was preoccupied with
the "second Gospel axiom," a second justification by works. Fletcher insisted
that both gospel axioms were complementary and must be held together theologically, and in
practice by emphasizing Christ in all of His offices. Thus Fletcher wrote: 44
If I may compare the Gospel Truth to the child contended for in the days of Solomon,
both parties, while they divide, inadvertently destroy it. We, like the true mother, are
for no division. Standing upon the middle Scriptural line, we embrace and hold first both
Gospel axioms. With the Calvinists, we give God in Christ all the glory of our salvation;
and, with the moralists, we take care not to give him in Adam any of the share in our
damnation. (31)
Fletcher's doctrine of a "second justification by works" must be understood
as the means by which he sought to reawaken the Antinomians and to encourage believers to
pursue a life of holiness. His explanation of the doctrine is that initial justification
or conversion is by faith alone; justification at the day of judgment will be only by the
works of faith. His prayer was that the "merciful Keeper of Israel" would save
from both extremes by a living faith, legally productive of all good works, or by good
works, evangelically springing from a living faith." (32)
The current interest in ecumenicity is calling for a reappraisal of Fletcher's
methodology. Because he was a mediating theologian, it is believed that he has something
significant to offer to our contemporary situation. If this interest reflects a genuine
quest for truth, then these words from Fletcher's pen are worthy of careful study:
Mankind are prone to run into extremes. The world is full of men who always overdo or
underdo. Few people ever find the line of moderation, the golden mean; and of those who
do, few stay long upon it. One blast or another of vain doctrine soon drives them east or
west from the meridian of pure truth. (33)
If this evaluation of mankind's tendencies appears to be too pessimistic, it is only
fair to Fletcher to add that he would balance this "pessimism of nature" with an
"optimism of grace." (34)
Because Antinomianism is one of the very real problems in our contemporary society,
Fletcher's Checks to Antinomianism are taking on a new relevancy. Churchmen of the
twentieth century need to avail themselves of whatever they can find of value in
Fletcher's methodology.
There is a small minority of people in our modern society who is concerned about our
Antinomian problem and is sounding an alarm. Robert E. Fitch, professor of Christian
ethics at the Pacific School of Religion, is one of them, and he writes a description of
the widespread erosion of authority. He says:
Of course, I have in mind primarily moral authority. . . . The erosion of this
authority has taken place partly under allegedly democratic and egalitarian theories that
we're all equal and nobody's any better than anybody else, partly under the impact of
relativistic teachings in history, anthropology and philosophy that say everything is
relative to the culture and there's no objective standard of right and wrong, truth and
falsehood. (35)
So widespread is this lawlessness that it respects neither the "radical
right" nor the "existential left." Fitch continues:
Any number of 'liberals' and 'radicals' believe passionately in this same
proposition.... This inordinate love of liberty apart from law, apart from social
structure and order, which is not the classical pattern of liberty in either England or
America. So you have a kind of individualistic, egoistic liberty, that destroys self. (36)
It is believed that the cause of today's widespread Antinomianism can be laid at the
door of existentialism. L. Harold De Wolf suggests this when he writes:
Much existentialist thought moves on the very edge of antinomianism, that is, the
repudiation of all moral law as related to salvation. Kierkegaard's depreciation of
consistency and his doctrine that God commands the unethical and irrational, and Tillich's
defining of justification as 'acceptance of acceptance', without specifying the need of
repentance, tend to lessen the moral earnestness of Christian faith. (37)
Someone has expressed the plight of today's Christians in the following line:
"How free we seem, how fettered fast we lie." (38)
Today's brand of Antinomianism must be recognized for what it is. Responsible
leadership in the tradition of Wesley and Fletcher must guide the church today between the
twin rocks of licentious lawlessness and Pharisaic legalism.
DOCUMENTATIONS
1. Luke Tyerman, Wesley's Designated Successor (New York: A.C. Armstrong & Son,
1886), p. 340.
2. Townsend-Workman-Eayrs (eds.), A New History of Methodism (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1919), I, 320.
3. J. A. Dorner, History of Protestant Theology (Edinburgh: T. and T. Clark, 1871), II,
p. 92.
4. Abel Stevens, The History of Methodism (New York: Hunt & Eaton, 1859), II, 55.
5. C. A. Briggs, Theological Symbolics (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1914), p.
327.
6. Wesley's Works, VIII, 336.
7. Fletcher's Works, I, 8.
8. See John Allan Knight, "John Fletcher and the Early Methodist Tradition," Unpublished doctoral thesis. Graduate School of Vanderbilt University, 1966, p. 90.
9. Op. cit., I, 108.
10. Ibid., p. 206.
11. Ibid., p. 135.
12. Wesley, op. tit., XI, p. 300.
13. Fletcher, op, Mt., II, p. 277f.
14. Euscbius, The Ecclesiastical History, 2 vols., trans. by Kusopp Lake (NewYork: G.
P. Putnam's, 1926), I, pp. 327-328.
15. Gertrude Huehns, Antinomianism in English History (London: The Cresset Prom, 1951)
p. 18.
16. Albert H. Newman, A Manual of Church History, 2 vols. Philadelphia: The American
Baptist Publication Society, 1931) II, p. 68.
17. Fletcher, op. cit., II, p. 274.
18. Ibid., p. 272.
19. Ibid., p. 261.
20. Ibid., p. 274.
21. Ibid., p. 276.
22. Loc. cit.
23. Loc. cit.
24. John Omen, Grace and Personality (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1917), p. 28. This book
has been reprinted by the Association Press, N.Y. 1961.
25. David C. ShipIcy, "Methodist Arminianism in the Theology of John
Fletcher." An unpublished doctoral dissertation presented to the faculty of the
Graduate School of Yale Univ., 1942. p. 379.
26. Huehns, op. tit., p. 13.
27. ShipIcy, op. tit., This is the term by which ShipIcy refers to Fletcher's
methodology.
28. Fletcher, 0p. cit., I, p. 486.
29. Ibid., I, p. 30, p. 80.
30. Ibid., I, 131.
31. Ibid., p. 330.
32. Ibid., p. 131.
33. Ibid., p. 274.
34. Colin W. Williams, John Wesley's Theology Today (New York: Abingdon Press, 1960),
p. 54. Quoted from G. Rupp, Principalities and Powers (London: Epworth Press, 1952), pp.
77ff.
35. Robert E. Fitch, "Is America Ready for A 'Great Society'?" U. S. News and
World Report, edited by David Lawrence, March 8, 1965. Vol. LVIII No. 10, p. 54.
36. Loc. tit.
37. L. Harold DeWofl, Present Trends in Christian Thought (New York: Association Press,
1960), pp. 73-74. A similar criticism of Existentialism is voiced by E. Herbert Nygren in
an article entitled "Wesley's Answer to Existentialism," published in the
Christian Advocate, Feb 11, 1965, vol IX.
38. Oman, op. cit., p. 63.
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