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Page 6 of 9
Chapter 4 –
Cowper’s Creed … And its Critics
The doctrines of
grace have been differently explained by a variety of people. In history, John Calvin is the great exponent
of these particular doctrines. In
Cowper's day it was Whitefield, Romaine, Newton
and others who proclaimed the sovereignty of grace in the salvation of the
sinner. Man dead in trespasses and sins
must be awakened and savingly joined to Christ by a sovereign act of God the
Holy Spirit. The faith which a person is
called upon to exercise in Christ is itself the gift of God and the life lived
is by God's enabling.
It may well be summarised by the phrase, ‘the Sovereignty of God in all
things'.
But where did Cowper stand?
Mine has been a life
of wonders for many years, and a life of wonders I in my heart believe it will
be to the end. Wonders I have seen in
the great deeps, and wonders I shall see in the paths of mercy also. This ... is
my creed.' [1]
A creed is a
declaration of what is believed. It may
be spoken or written. It may be set
forth in an orderly manner or presented haphazardly. But which ever way it is communicated, it
bears testimony to the foundational principles that govern life.
To study the Olney Hymns of Cowper is to be
introduced to ‘the great deeps' as well as ‘the paths of mercy'.
What did Cowper
believe? What were his views of God in
creation, salvation and providence? How
did he understand man as a creature, a sinner and a saint? What did he see as the Christian's great
hope? How did he view affliction in the
Christian life? What place did he give
to God's word? Ella informs us, ‘It is in Cowper's contributions to the famous Olney Hymns that we find some of the
clearest statements of his theology.'[2]
Cowper's theology
was his creed. And it is expressed with
clarity in his Christian poetry. The
statements are succinct and often memorable.
This is one of the real advantages of poetic expression. The village folk of Olney and subsequently
the Christian world at large have been the beneficiaries.
What was his
creed? In a word it was ‘avowedly
Calvinistic' says S.M. Houghton.[3] For Cowper, salvation was all of grace. Conceived in the eternal counsels of the
Triune God, its purposes were accomplished in the perfect obedience and atoning
death of the ‘dear dying Lamb' (Hymn 15).
The benefits thus procured are applied by the effectual working of the
Holy Spirit. The believer's life is a
sustained life and the grace of God that saves is the very grace that leads to
glory. But grace is not to be presumed. It is grace that the sinner must seek and
appropriate by faith in Christ.
Yet not unsought, or unimplor'd,
The plenteous
grace shall I confer. (Hymn 13)
There is no
hyper-Calvinism in Cowper. The offers of
mercy are wide and free.
The vile, the lost, he calls to
them
Ye trembling souls appear!
The righteous in their own
esteem,
Have no acceptance here.
Approach ye poor, nor dare refuse
The banquet spread for you;
Dear Saviour,
this is welcome news,
Then I may venture too. (Hymn 27)
There is the
erroneous view that Calvinism rightly understood cannot include a genuine
overture of mercy to sinners, and that the doctrine of election is incompatible
with the sincere desire in God that men and women turn to him in repentance and
faith.[4]
Cowper did not
accept such a view. His doctrines of God
and Man, Election and Salvation are eminently Scriptural. There was no deviation from historic
Calvinism as formulated in the five key Reformed doctrines which occupied the
Synod of Dort (1618-19). This too was
the position of most of the Puritans in the 17th Century, as well as
Whitefield, Newton,
Harris, Rowland and Grimshaw during the Evangelical Revival. In the Olney
Hymns, Cowper is expressing Reformation Theology in his unique poetic
style. He held to the Five Points of
Calvinism, as they are commonly known.
Yet his critics are either ignorant or prejudiced, and persist in
misrepresenting or caricaturing his Reformed beliefs.
Whatever one's
convictions concerning Calvinism, it is inexcusable when a critic misrepresents
Calvin's theology. Professor Hartley
displays such an approach when he says, ‘After the Fall, according to
Calvinistic interpretation, God decreed that man's will should not work in
harmony with the Divine will. But God
became merciful, allowing salvation to the elect by Christ's sacrifice.'[5]
Routley tells us
that, ‘Calvinism - so uncongenial to Cowper's temperament...broke his heart.'[6] Later on
he says that Cowper was ‘immobilized by Calvinism'.[7] To find
a sympathetic understanding, and balanced
review of Cowper's Calvinistic verse, one would have to look beyond
Routley. Yet his influence has been
considerable.
William Benham,
editor of the Globe Edition of Cowper's Poems which Ella tells us was ‘the once
definitive' edition, says,
It became as clear
to me as any demonstration could make it, that the Calvinistic doctrine and
religious excitements threw an already trembling mind off its balance, and
aggravated a malady which but for them might probably have been cured.[8]
Theologically, Cowper
has been presented in a poor light by many editors and biographers who have
stumbled at his Reformed convictions.
The establishment of
the Cowper Memorial Museum at Olney, the emergence of such publishing houses as
The Banner of Truth Trust and Evangelical Press whose contributors and
reviewers understand a full orbed Calvinism, and the research of Dr George Ella
have combined to address past misunderstandings. For this the Christian Church should be
particularly grateful.
We now turn to
Cowper's own expression of the Doctrines of Grace with particular reference to
the Five Points of Calvinism.
For a comprehensive
statement in verse of his spiritual pilgrimage his Song of Mercy and Judgment is worthy of careful study. It was written soon after his conversion.
The final two lines
of each of the thirteen verses alternate the following expressions.
Grace Divine, how sweet the Sound,
Sweet the grace which I have found.
Sweet the Sound of Grace Divine,
Sweet the grace which makes me thine.[9]
John Newton may well
have had these words of Cowper in mind when some eight to nine years later he
wrote,
Amazing grace, (how sweet the Sound)
That saved a wretch like me!
[1] ‘The Letters of Cowper',
January 1786, as quoted in Ella, Cowper,
p. 411
[2] Ella, Banner of Truth magazine, Issue 256, p. 7
[3] S.M. Houghton, ‘Olney
Hymns, An Appreciation', Bible League
Quarterly, October -December, 1979, p. 278
[4] Ezekiel 33:11; Luke 13:34;
John 6:37. Also see page 32.
[5] Hartley, ‘The Worm and the
Thorn', p. 224
[6] Routley, I'll Praise My Maker, pp. 70,71
[7] Routley, I'll Praise My Maker, p. 141
[8] As quoted by Ella, Banner of Truth magazine, vol. 269, p. 13
[9] Baird & Ryscamp, The Poems, pp. 135-137. See Appendix B
for the full text of this poem. Also included is ‘To Jesus the Crown of My
Hope', written whilst at Olney in about 1771, and probably incomplete. Baird
and Ryskamp, The Poems, p. 479.
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