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Gavin D'Costa's Theory of the Unevangelized: A Continuing Assessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Kyle Faircloth*
Affiliation:
Malaysia Baptist Theological Seminary, Penang
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Abstract

Gavin D'Costa has distinguished himself as a leading voice in the field of theology of religions, and not just among Roman Catholics. His Trinitarian approach to the subject has also garnered respect among Protestants, such as Reformed theologian Tan Loe-Joo. Yet Tan is concerned that D'Costa compromises the Trinitarian framework of his approach by conflating universal salvific will and salvific grace, and that his use of limbo falls short of satisfying the scriptural principle that faith comes by hearing (Rom 10:17). This article is an evaluation of D'Costa's theory as it relates to the former issue concerning salvific will and grace. I seek to show that Tan's worry stems more from an incomplete theological delineation of grace than from an actual shift in D'Costa's theological position. I then suggest a solution that provides some common ground from which both Catholic and Protestant theologians can seek a resolution to the latter issue concerning the principle of faith by hearing.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

Introduction

The Lutheran theologian Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen commends D'Costa for his adherence to the Trinitarian rules of discourse despite recent trends to the contrary, and he declares: “In my opinion, D'Costa's trinitarian theology represents the most nuanced response to other religions from the perspective of classical Christian trinitarian faith.”Footnote 1 His only concern is that D'Costa diminishes the ecumenical usefulness of his theory by limiting his methodology to Vatican II and post-Conciliar statements. So Kärkkäinen suggests that D'Costa's approach would benefit from being put into “critical dialogue with wider Catholic and non-Catholic voices.”Footnote 2 As regards the latter, Tan Loe-Joo's assessment provides a good starting point.

Tan states that “the chief significant merit” of D'Costa's position is that “he places strong emphasis on the Spirit being understood only in reference to Christ, and his activity as related to the paschal mystery of Christ.”Footnote 3 Yet he also argues that D'Costa compromises the Trinitarian structure of his theory through his continued efforts to work out Conciliar and post-Conciliar statements on other religions. Tan claims that there “is an unaccounted movement” in his writings, “from the assertion of a universal salvific will to universal salvific grace which affects the subsequent trajectory of his theology.”Footnote 4 In other words, D'Costa's focus on the notion of “universal salvific grace” causes him to treat it “as a theological construct effectively decoupled from the Christ-event, and seemingly theologically prior to the two economic Persons.”Footnote 5 And, according to Tan, this disconnect between the concept of saving grace and the saving work of Christ and the Spirit is most evident in D'Costa's theory of the unevangelized.Footnote 6 While appreciating Tan's objections, I will argue that a more robust theology of grace will help keep D'Costa's proposal within the Trinitarian rules and also better position his approach for meeting “the ecumenical challenge” of presenting a common Christian witness in a multi-religious world.Footnote 7

The Question of the Unevangelized: A Prospective Fides Ex Auditu Option

In his book Christianity and World Religions (CWR), D'Costa grounds his discussion of the unevangelized in the express teaching of the Roman Catholic Church – that a non-Christian can be saved – and “the problems thus left unresolved” by this affirmation.Footnote 8 For instance, Vatican II's Lumen Gentium states:

Those also can attain to salvation who through no fault of their own do not know the Gospel of Christ or His Church, yet sincerely seek God and moved by grace strive by their deeds to do His will as it is known to them through the dictates of conscience.Footnote 9

The difficulty in working out this statement, is that the Catholic Church also teaches that salvation, even for the unevangelized, “is always given by means of Christ in the Spirit and has a mysterious relationship to the Church.”Footnote 10 So the question is, how can a person who does not know Christ and his church receive salvation if it ‘is always given’ through this very knowledge?

D'Costa says the “usual answer” given by Catholic theologians is that good non-Christians “can implicitly know Christ and his church through an implicit or unconscious desire.”Footnote 11 Yet he argues that this response does not explain how these people are saved in an eschatological sense, because “final salvation requires not only an ontological and causal, but also an epistemological relationship to Christ.”Footnote 12 More precisely:

This salvation won by Christ is only available through faith in Christ, which comes from hearing the gospel preached in this life or the next (fides ex auditu), requiring repentance, baptism, and the embracing of a new life in Christ.Footnote 13

From this position, D'Costa claims that the postmortem option “is actually implied in … Roman Catholicism” through the “resources” provided by the confession of Christ's descent into hell (from the Apostles’ Creed).Footnote 14

To set up his argument, D'Costa begins by characterizing the type of unevangelized person the Catholic Church teaches can attain salvation. He introduces a hypothetical scenario involving a practicing Buddhist called Jane, who has never heard the gospel but “has lived a good life, following the truth to the best of her ability, in the light of her conscience”; also, “it is assumed that possibilities of the good, true, and beautiful life might be found in positive elements within her religion” – i.e., opportunities for her to respond “to the promptings of the Holy Spirit.”Footnote 15 With this description in place, he states:

The question is: how can original and personal sins be forgiven, how can persons consciously share in the beatific vision, how can they participate in the joy and glory of the risen Lord, without knowing Christ and his church in any possible way when they die as a non-Christian?Footnote 16

In other words, how does one account for the fides ex auditu in the salvation of Jane? Towards the development of a postmortem solution, D'Costa first seeks to align his project in the tradition of Joseph DiNoia.Footnote 17

Joseph DiNoia's Proposal

In his work The Diversity of Religions, DiNoia dispenses with the notion of implicit faith and the view that other religions can mediate salvation, and appropriates instead George Lindbeck's idea of the “unsubstitutable uniqueness” of other religions within God's salvific plan.Footnote 18 In this way, he suggests that while religions differ in their claims to ultimate reality, this need not rule out the possibility that certain moral aspects of non-Christian religions could end up being a boon to salvation rather than part of that which will be forfeit in the consummation. So while these moral aspects do not produce a present salvific effect, they might nonetheless function as a preparatio evangelica orienting a person towards salvation at a future time. DiNoia explains:

A theology of religions developed along these lines could acknowledge the goodness and uprightness of other religious people without ascribing immediate salvific value to these qualities.…

At the same time, appropriate Christian valuations of such qualities could be framed in terms of an “eschatological” rather than a present salvific value.Footnote 19

His point here is a practical one. Christians can affirm that non-Christians are within the purview of God's salvific plan without imposing a direct Christian significance to their religious beliefs and practices. They can trust that “other religious communities, while pursuing their distinctive aims, foster rather than obstruct the development in their members of the disposition to attain and enjoy the true end of life, fellowship with the Blessed Trinity.”Footnote 20

DiNoia insists that this kind of ‘prospective’ view means Christians can accept the moral practices and doctrinal self-descriptions of other religious communities at face value, while also ascribing “an indirect contributory (broadly providential rather than specifically salvific) value to them.”Footnote 21 Still, how does a non-Christian move from merely having a disposition that is conducive to Christian fellowship to actually having a personal relationship with God if they die before hearing the gospel? DiNoia suggests that this dilemma can be resolved “by appeal to the doctrine of purgatory.”Footnote 22

To be clear, DiNoia does not support the possibility of life-changing decisions after death.Footnote 23 Rather, the key idea is that those who die with a disposition conducive to fellowship with God might be able to continue moving towards this destination in purgatory. He states, “Purgatory would involve the realization of the continuities as well as the discontinuities between what they had practiced and believed and what is indeed the case about the true aim of life.”Footnote 24 Thus an unevangelized person's salvation involves a process of personal transformation which begins before death through moral decisions shaped by certain elements within their cultural-religious environments.Footnote 25

D'Costa is keen to develop DiNoia's proposal further, but he deals first with what he sees as two conflicting claims: “Other religions should be seen as professing different means and ends to that of Christianity while at the same time, he argues, non-Christians in these religions may be justified or in a state of grace.”Footnote 26 The problem is, if the particular aims of other religions are not Christological and their means are not ecclesiological, then how can they orient members towards the beatific vision? And even if the moral elements within other religions do indeed develop the dispositions of members to attain fellowship with God, D'Costa states, “I question whether purgatory can be assimilated to the non-Christian without further argument, as it has traditionally been understood as the process for those who are already epistemologically ‘in Christ.’”Footnote 27 In other words, the established understanding of purgatory is that it is an opportunity extended to Christians alone.Footnote 28 Hence, DiNoia's good non-Christians need explicit faith before they can enter purgatory.

How then does a non-Christian who dies with a disposition conducive to faith subsequently obtain faith through hearing the proclamation of the gospel when, in principle, the purgatorial doors are closed to non-Christians? D'Costa writes, “Given the various dogmatic parameters, … only in the event of the ‘descent’ does the unity of the epistemological and ontological take place to answer satisfactorily the question about Jane.”Footnote 29

Before proceeding, we should also note that while DiNoia ascribes only a future-oriented salvific value to moral aspects of other religions, D'Costa does not hesitate to ascribe a present salvific value to these elements. This is not to say that he thinks Jane is now saved. He maintains that there is no salvation outside an objective relation to Christ and his church (e.g., the problem question above). But in light of his reading of the Vatican II statements on non-Christians and other religions, D'Costa seeks to affirm “that there are elements, not structures, of grace within them.”Footnote 30 Similar to DiNoia, he posits a future-oriented salvation and yet argues further for a present-tense relation to grace and the work of the Holy Spirit through conscience and “positive elements” within the religion.Footnote 31 We will discuss more about this part of his theory later as it relates to Tan's assessment.

Incorporating the Doctrine of Christ's Descent into Hell

D'Costa recognizes that the theology of Christ's descent into hell presents “a complex and shifting picture.”Footnote 32 So he seeks to frame the discussion by noting some of the more consistent elements within the Roman Catholic tradition. First, he explains that in Catholic theology hell consists of four dimensions: 1) hell proper, which is “the place of damnation” and “a perduring reality”; 2) the limbo of unbaptized infants, “a state that has always been disputed” and “if it exists, is a perduring reality”; 3) the limbo of the just, “empty after Christ's descent” and “not a perduring reality”; and 4) purgatory, “a place of purification.”Footnote 33 Second, D'Costa considers the traditional Catholic interpretation of the doctrine of descent in light of the theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar.Footnote 34

The general understanding of the descent is that while Christ's victory on the cross was made known throughout all the levels of hell, he redeemed only those in the limbo of the just. Yet D'Costa explains that “Balthasar argues that the limbos and purgatory are irrelevant” to the doctrine of descent, because “death and damnation are the outcome of sin.”Footnote 35 In other words, Christ not only had to experience death but also alienation, which means “the Son descends into the depths of damnation.”Footnote 36 An assertion that looks rather different from the traditional view, but that Edward Oakes nonetheless insists represents “a legitimate doctrinal development.”Footnote 37 The reason for this insistence, says D'Costa, is that

Oakes argues for Balthasar's solution for the descent into hell in relation to non-Christians, for it allows Christ to “bestow grace eschatologically on whom he will” (2007, 188); which means that all non-Christians might be saved.Footnote 38

Yet D'Costa is unsatisfied with this quasi-universalism position, and he turns next to Alyssa Lyra Pitstick's critical evaluation of Balthasar's theology.Footnote 39

D'Costa explains that for Pitstick, Balthasar's theology is not a doctrinal development but rather it “corrupts a true doctrine.”Footnote 40 She argues that the definitive Catholic teaching maintains that Christ's redeeming work was finished on the cross and that the descent was “Christ's application of the fruit of redemption.”Footnote 41 D'Costa agrees with Pitstick, stating:

I would conclude that Balthasar's descent into hell teaching is both in danger of contradicting the teachings of the Catholic church, … and in danger of advancing a deeply problematic Christology and trinitarian doctrine of God.Footnote 42

For if Christ experienced genuine alienation, then he experienced an ontological separation from the Father resulting in “a rupture in the Godhead.”Footnote 43 Thus D'Costa maintains that Christ descended “in his soul to the limbo of the just and not in this manner to the other regions, although his power and authority are known in all four regions through his descent.”Footnote 44

Finally, D'Costa points out that the early church teaching on the subject “was grounded on a number of biblical texts:

The most important being Luke 16:22 – the parable of Dives and Lazarus at “Abraham's bosom”; Luke 23:43 – where Jesus on the cross tells the penitent thief that “today you shall be with me in paradise”; Ephesians 4:9 – where Paul says that before Jesus ascended he “also descended first into the lower parts of the earth”; and 1 Peter 3:10-4:6.Footnote 45

He then states that the 1 Peter passage (which speaks of Christ's proclamation “to the spirits in prison” - 3:19) “is probably the most pivotal,” and then proceeds to give a concise survey of the patristic interpretation of this passage.Footnote 46

He begins with Clement of Alexandria, who argues that because it is the work of Christ to save, his descent into hell occasioned salvation for both the Jew and the non-Jew alike; for “do not the Scriptures show the Lord preached the Gospel to those that perished in the flood?”Footnote 47 D'Costa says that in this way, Clement initiated “a long tradition that includes both Jews and pagans in the limbo of the just.”Footnote 48 Yet he also highlights Clement's use of the Shepherd of Hermas, which teaches that when the apostles and other teachers of the gospel died, they went and preached to those who had “fallen asleep” before them, so that these too might be “made to know the name of the Son of God” and be saved.Footnote 49

Another interpretation D'Costa notes is from Origen, who reads 1 Peter 3:19-20 (and Ezekiel 16:53) as a message of hope. For Origen, God's just punishment of sinners is given “with the prospect of improvement, … of which hope Peter himself thus speaks in his first Epistle” concerning those destroyed in the flood.Footnote 50 Nevertheless, D'Costa is careful to point out that “in his response to Celsus (Against Celsus 2.43), Origen says Christ converted only those ‘who were suitable and were willing to hear him’ (30), which runs counter to any easy universalism.”Footnote 51 He also mentions Cyril of Alexandria and John Damascene as examples of those in the Greek church who maintained Origen's interpretation of the 1 Peter passage – “although John is very clear that Christ saves only the righteous who deserve salvation.”Footnote 52 Finally, he looks to Augustine in the Latin tradition who specifies that there is no second-chance option after death.Footnote 53

In light of the Fathers’ use of the teaching of Christ's descent into hell to explain the salvation of Jews who died before the incarnation, and the tradition which includes righteous non-Jews with righteous Jews in the limbo of the just, D'Costa writes, “Can we analogically argue that the limbo of the just must conceptually exist in relation to non-Christians like Jane who are in a similar situation to the pre-Christian just? … The answer I think is a yes and a no.”Footnote 54

As regards this yes and no answer, D'Costa explains that one obstacle to an easy comparison is the understanding that after his resurrection Christ emptied the limbo of the just, and “if the limbo of the just is empty, … then the analogy breaks down.”Footnote 55 Yet he proposes a solution to this dilemma. Referring to the repentant thief on the cross in Luke 23:40-43 (sometimes called Dismas), he observes that “most of the fathers” say that after his death Dismas is located in “the limbo of the just [i.e., paradise], not in heaven (for no one could enter until Christ's resurrection).”Footnote 56 And because Dismas was both a recent convert and a recent thief, we might assume he was not ready for the beatific vision when Christ opened the doors of heaven. In this case, Dismas represents those who may “still require ‘time’ to mature into the new life of faith that they had begun.”Footnote 57 D'Costa concludes that even though Christ emptied the limbo of the just and opened the doors of heaven after his resurrection, this does not necessarily mean everyone was prepared to experience the Blessed Trinity at that time. He states, “I am not arguing that Christ is unable to transform the individual instantaneously. Rather, from the human point of view, if one inhabitant of the limbo of the just, Dismas for example, might still require purification, why not others?”Footnote 58

Another objection D'Costa addresses is in regard to the special status of Israel as a covenant people. He asserts that while other religions are in no way comparable to “the sui generis nature of Judaism, both after and before the time of Christ,” the analogy may yet lie in the fact that Christ's descent completes what is lacking for those who were on their way to salvation before their death.Footnote 59 Hence, “if the righteous Jew is not said to ‘convert,’ but rather to come to fulfillment, it is fair to conclude that this is also possibly true, with a very different sense of fulfillment, in the case of the righteous pagan.”Footnote 60 That is to say, as Christ's descent into the limbo of the just explains how those who were ontologically related to God before death became epistemologically related to Christ after death, perhaps a qualified application of this teaching will also support a similar explanation for the salvation of good non-Christians since the time of Christ's ascension.

With this brief description we find that the chief elements of D'Costa's theory are: 1) the Roman Catholic Church's affirmation that a non-Christian can be saved; 2) an emphasis of Christ's descent into hell in relation to the limbo of the just; 3) the patristic inclusion of good non-Jews with those who benefited from Christ's descent into hell; and 4) the notion that Christ's descent not only emptied the limbo of the just but also opened the doors of purgatory for those in need of further transformation.

Reassessing Tan's Assessment

In the initial development of his theology of religions D'Costa followed Karl Rahner's version of inclusivism, which views other religions as provisional salvific structures by which non-Christians can be saved.Footnote 61 D'Costa no longer holds this view. One important reason for this change is that “the fides ex auditu is missing from Rahner's position.”Footnote 62 So although he maintains that non-Christians can be ontologically united to Christ through their positive responses to elements (not structures) of grace and the activity of the Spirit, he also argues that outside hearing the gospel with faith these elements are insufficient for salvation.Footnote 63 As Wouter Biesbrouck explains:

Whereas for Rahner, it seems that this causal and ontological link with God/Christ is sufficient for the salvation of the non-Christian, it is not so for D'Costa.…The implication is that non-Christians, who are linked to Christ in an ontological way, must also be confronted with Christ epistemologically in one way or another.Footnote 64

Nevertheless, Tan surveys a broad spectrum of D'Costa's work in the theology of religions and, as noted earlier, insists that a critical theological shift occurs within his main statements on the subject in regard to the universal salvific will of God and the notion of universal salvific grace.Footnote 65

Grace, Righteousness, and the Good Non-Christian

Tan begins by noting D'Costa's confirmation of the universality of God's salvific will in one of his early works, Theology and Religious Pluralism,Footnote 66 and then compares it to a later work, stating:

Subsequently, in his paper, “Towards a Trinitarian Theology of Religions”, this universality axiom became modified as, “God loves and desires the salvation of all men and women, thereby emphasising the universality of grace.” … There is an unaccounted movement here from the assertion of a universal salvific will to universal salvific grace which affects the subsequent trajectory of his theology.Footnote 67

To demonstrate this trajectory, Tan turns to D'Costa's next monograph, The Meeting of Religions and the Trinity,Footnote 68 in which the “underlying assumption of a priori grace remains” and where, Tan says, “the categories of natural and supernatural grace were collapsed such that all grace is viewed as salvific and universal.”Footnote 69 Indeed, perhaps the most telling example of this seeming ‘collapse’ of grace is when D'Costa suggests that it is possible for one to hold that other religions are not salvific per se, “while holding at the same time, without contradiction, that supernatural saving grace is operative in other religions and that in those other religions there is much that is true, good, and holy.”Footnote 70 It is one thing to claim that grace is present in other religions, but another thing altogether to call this grace ‘saving.’ Tan concludes:

Given the prior assertion of salvific grace to be found universally, the conclusion of “Christ-like” religious Others to be found in the religions is almost theo-logically inevitable, and does not appear to differ in kind from the theory of anonymous Christians, even though he had rejected Rahnerian transcendental anthropology and posited a closer Spirit-Christ connection. Because of the lack of a clear economic connection between grace with the operations of the Spirit and Christ, the subsequent outworking of his theology at times seems more governed by an implicit theology of grace rather than the operations of the divine Persons as should befit a Trinitarian theology of religions.Footnote 71

This is an interesting argument. Tan claims that while D'Costa has rejected Rahner's notion of implicit saving faith, he has nonetheless replaced it with a notion of equivalent consequence – implicit saving grace.

To support his assertion, Tan highlights D'Costa's analogical use of the limbo of the just for explaining the salvation of non-Christians. He writes:

Placing the non-Christian in the limbo of the just suggests the non-Christian occupies a theological position analogous to the OT Fathers, which contravenes his own assertion of a sui generis Judaism-Christianity connection.Footnote 72

His argument is that D'Costa's utilization of Christ's descent into limbo for satisfying the fides ex auditu principle obscures a crucial difference between the Old Testament righteous and the good non-Christian. That is, the righteous Old Testament figures were not in limbo merely because they responded positively to elements of grace outside the covenant, but “because they had already exhibited fides through the hearing of God's Word proclaimed by the OT prophets.”Footnote 73 Thus, Tan argues that D'Costa's construal of Jane “runs the danger of downplaying the special revelation received by the Fathers, over-elevating the significance of the general revelation she has received, and casts doubts on his system's ability to preserve a singular Judaism-Christianity relationship.”Footnote 74 To be fair, D'Costa claims that his analogous application does not have in view “the reality of the covenant embedded within Israel, which is not embedded in other religions,” but rather “the righteousness that might be present within Israel and other religions.”Footnote 75 Yet Tan's concern remains valid to the extent that the qualifications for ‘righteousness’ – and thus entrance into the limbo of the just – includes Old Testament figures having been the particular recipients of the messianic promise. So while D'Costa's analogy hinges on the notion of Old Testament righteousness, this ‘righteousness’ was still contingent upon an act of believing God's proclaimed word.

The point here is not that the Old Testament figures knew the person of Jesus before his descent, but that like Abraham (and the analogy concerns ‘the bosom of Abraham’) they possessed an explicit faith in the promise of a Savior. And when we look to Abraham as the exemplar of faith, we find that instead of being something that is added to an already existing righteousness, the explicit act of faith itself signifies the beginning of righteousness (Gen 15:6; Rom 4:3). This is not to deny God's gracious work among non-Christians through the Spirit's activity or to say that a non-Christian cannot be deemed ‘good,’ ‘just,’ or even ‘righteous’ simply because they lack Christian faith. Rather, it is to say that perhaps further argument is needed before the analogical doors of the limbo of the just can be opened to non-Christians.

D'Costa seems to hold two conflicting claims. He says that “in keeping with Vatican II” other religions are not salvific structures but do contain elements of grace which serve as preparation for the gospel,Footnote 76 and yet he also argues that the Vatican II position “admits the saving activity of the ‘Spirit’ being present within elements of other religions, mixed with error and superstition, but which nevertheless indicates the presence of supernatural saving grace.”Footnote 77 So it is not at all clear whether he views this grace as preparatory or saving. To be sure, D'Costa stops short of claiming that a non-Christian can die in a state of justification, but he nonetheless argues that the good non-Christian (e.g., Jane) has an ontological relation with Christ through ‘saving’ grace.Footnote 78 Yet what remains uncertain is the exact nature of Jane's ontological relation to Christ. Presumably it is a state of grace, but how is this particular work of grace deemed ‘supernatural’ and ‘saving’ when it occurs outside the church's proclamation of the gospel of Christ?

Because of this confusion, I propose that D'Costa's theory would greatly benefit from a more careful explanation of the nature and purpose of these ‘elements of grace’ in other religions. For as he himself affirms, “Based purely on tracing the contours of what scripture permits us to say: as far as we know the conditions of salvation require solus Christus, fides ex auditu, and extra ecclesiam nulla salus.”Footnote 79 To this purpose, we will turn to consider some theological delineations of grace.

Defining Grace

Let us review. Jane, who is a Buddhist, responds positively to the good and beautiful elements in her religion and is thereby on her way to salvation. She is not ‘saved’ insofar as her response is not yet secured by faith, but she is nonetheless ontologically related to Christ through her positive response. In death, she will receive faith through the hearing of the gospel and this prospective fides ex auditu solution is countenanced largely through an analogical application of Christ's descent into the limbo of the just and the doctrine of purgatory. Yet our noted concerns revolve around one main issue – the nature and work of grace in Jane's life before her death. For if these elements are actual manifestations of ‘supernatural saving grace,’ then, as Tan asserts, grace becomes a theological concept disconnected from the saving work of Christ and the Spirit. Thus the difficulty lies with D'Costa's use of the terms ‘saving’ and ‘supernatural’ for describing this universal grace, and a more precise explanation of the nature and function of this grace is needed to satisfy Tan's concern.

Considering ‘Natural’ and ‘Supernatural’ Grace

Recall Tan's accusation that D'Costa collapses natural and supernatural grace within the notion of God's universal salvific will, and that because of this collapse his theory lacks “a clear economic connection between grace with the operations of the Spirit and Christ.”Footnote 80 To address this issue we must first consider the Roman Catholic theological environment in which D'Costa cultivates his theory. For instance, in regard to the delineations of grace, Ludwig Ott explains that in its “wider sense” natural grace refers to “the Creation and gifts of the natural order, such as bodily health and mental soundness.”Footnote 81 Yet Catholic theology also teaches that a person, by nature, is able to “perform good works without help of Divine grace, by his natural powers alone” and “can know God by the sole light of reason” (albeit in a limited way mixed with error).Footnote 82 Nevertheless, because of “the ‘wound of ignorance’ … caused by the Fall” no one is saved by natural grace alone. So even though a person can know something about God and can do good works through ‘the sole light of reason’ and by their own ‘natural powers,’ this ‘natural’ achievement is not itself saving grace nor does it constitute a preparation for grace per se. As Ott states, “A natural positive disposition for grace is not possible, since between nature and grace there is no inner proportion.”Footnote 83

In other words, if a person has a positive disposition for saving grace, this is due solely to a ‘supernatural’ work of God “which intrinsically moves the soul, that is, actual grace by way of preparation for the reception of sanctifying grace.”Footnote 84 Hence, the issue for D'Costa and other Catholic theologians is in how to explain “the way in which the salvific grace of God – which is always given by means of Christ in the Spirit and has a mysterious relationship to the church – comes to individual non-Christians.”Footnote 85 How does a person who only has access to natural grace receive supernatural preparation for and the attainment of saving grace?

D'Costa's proposal is that the Vatican II position appears to expand the traditional understanding of preparatio evangelica so that what was once viewed as strictly ‘natural’ elements might now be understood in supernatural terms.Footnote 86 As noted above, D'Costa does not suggest that other religions are alternative ways of salvation, but that perhaps good and true elements within them function as supernatural means by which an unevangelized person can become ontologically related to Christ.Footnote 87 Yet it is this very point to which Tan objects, saying that without this distinction between natural and supernatural grace, the categories of grace are “collapsed such that all grace is viewed as salvific and universal.”Footnote 88 But a closer reading may show that D'Costa has a rather different interpretation in mind.

Grace: A Work of the Holy Spirit

Tan uses a partial quote from The Meeting of Religions to support his claim that D'Costa's theory collapses the categories of grace, which states, “Thus, the grace in other religions was seen as ‘not in terms of a division between the grace of creation and the grace of salvation.’”Footnote 89 But the context of this statement is D'Costa's summation of two writings by Pope John Paul II regarding the Council's position on other religions.Footnote 90 In short, the Pope emphasizes the preparatio evangelica while also affirming the Holy Spirit's work through that which is good and true in the world. For example, in Redemptoris Missio he states, “Whatever the Spirit brings about in human hearts and in the history of peoples, in cultures and religions serves as a preparation for the Gospel and can only be understood in reference to Christ.”Footnote 91 D'Costa's conclusion, then, is that based on the statements by Pope John Paul II and the Council, even though other religions do not serve as salvific structures,

it is also clear that the grace encountered in non-Christian religions is viewed as a preparatio evangelica, though not in terms of a division between the grace of creation and the grace of salvation, or of natural and supernatural grace, but only because within the historical church is this grace finally properly ordered toward its eschatological fulfillment. Therefore, this grace is “not an alternative to Christ.”Footnote 92

His point is that ‘this grace’ does not fit into the simple division of natural and supernatural grace per se. For this grace is like natural grace in that it occurs outside the church's proclamation of the gospel and is on its own insufficient for salvation. Yet it is also like supernatural grace in that it is a work of the Holy Spirit to prepare a person for the gospel. Thus we find that rather than a collapse of categories, D'Costa's theory seeks to address the need for defining how the Spirit draws individuals outside the church towards an eschatological salvation in Christ. As he asserts in CWR, his solution

allows for the real variety of religious ends in the world's religions, while still recognizing that within these differences there may be sufficient elements of preparatio evangelica that allow God's grace to work toward the final salvation of such persons.Footnote 93

If we recall the example of Jane, then the idea here is that Jane is not merely responding to “the light of her conscience” and to “the good, true, and beautiful … found in positive elements within her religion,” but in doing so she “is acting in response to the promptings of the Holy Spirit.”Footnote 94

Still, until this type of grace is labeled and better defined, Tan's objection remains valid. For if, as D'Costa rightly claims, the true and good elements by which this grace is mediated are insufficient for salvation, then calling this grace ‘saving’ and ‘supernatural’ only confuses the point. Although, we should also note that Tan's position suffers from a version of terminological confusion as well, because Protestant theology, especially in the Reformed tradition, does not often distinguish grace as ‘natural’ and ‘supernatural.’ Unlike the Catholic view, Protestant theology holds that by nature a person cannot reason their way towards God nor perform morally good acts. As Reformed theologian Herman Bavinck explains, “Nothing good remained in fallen man; all his thoughts, words, and deeds were polluted by sin.”Footnote 95 Therefore the existence of the good, true, and beautiful in the world is not due to nature, but to divine intervention.Footnote 96 And in this way, the distinction is usually expressed as ‘common grace’ and ‘special grace,’ where only the former is universal and only the latter is saving.Footnote 97

Nevertheless, from this perspective we see that both common grace and special grace are, in a technical sense, forms of supernatural grace, as both constitute a work of divine intervention. Which means that the equivalent Protestant need to D'Costa's Catholic proposal is to seek a conceptual category and definition for a kind of grace that is not merely common grace or special grace, but that nonetheless constitutes a ‘preparing’ work of the Spirit for orienting an unevangelized person towards the attainment of salvation at a future time. And to this purpose, we may find that the solution for both the Catholic and Protestant dilemma is close at hand.

A Partial Resolution

We noted earlier that Ott defines the kind of grace that prepares a person for receiving sanctifying grace as “actual grace.”Footnote 98 He goes on to explain that this aspect of grace (also called “assisting” or “helping” grace) “is a temporary supernatural intervention by God by which the powers of the soul are stirred up to perform a salutary act which is directed to the attaining or preservation or increase of sanctifying grace.”Footnote 99 For our purposes here, the important point about this theological sense of grace is that although it is a temporary divine act and therefore insufficient for salvation, it is nonetheless a divine act towards the attainment of salvation.

So, in the case of Jane, we might say that the Holy Spirit's work of actual grace enables her positive response to the good, true, and beautiful thereby directing her towards the attaining of saving grace at a future time. And the emphasis here is not so much on the existence of ‘elements of grace’ in other religions, but on the preparatory work of the Spirit in the world through elements of ‘natural’ or ‘common’ grace. Moreover, in light of Tan's objections, this application has the added benefit of maintaining the theological connection between the concept of ‘universal salvific grace’ and the two economic Persons.Footnote 100 For the nature of actual grace is ‘salvific’ to the extent that it is a work of the Spirit leading people to Christ. In other words, although the proposal is that this grace is universally accessible, it also holds that this grace is efficacious only for certain individuals and functions only as a preparation – a position that provides substantial “theological territory” for both Catholics and Protestants to distinguish the universal salvific will of God.Footnote 101

For instance, in his latest book Vatican II: Catholic Doctrines on Jews and Muslims, D'Costa writes:

The positive elements within the religions orient (ordinantur) all men and women towards the gospel. All these non-Christian religions … belong to the ‘People of God’ in potentiality, for God desires the salvation of all and Christ is the head of all men and women.…This potentiality is actualized on earth through supernatural faith in Christ and baptism. How it is actualized after death is another matter.Footnote 102

Of course, we know from CWR what his proposal is for explaining how faith is actualized after death. The problem with this statement here, however, is that if these elements orient all men and women towards the gospel (based on God's universal salvific will), then it becomes difficult for D'Costa to explain how his position differs from the quasi-universalism of Balthasar and Oakes. Yet, if interpreted through the lens of ‘actual grace,’ he could say that the Spirit's work through these elements orients all people towards the gospel in two ways: those who respond positively are, by grace, being prepared to receive faith when they hear the gospel, while those who respond negatively to this grace are thereby preparing themselves to reject the gospel. Hence, this work of actual grace orients all people towards the gospel, but not all are thereby oriented towards salvation.

As regards the Protestant context, perhaps the application would focus less on a person's response to certain ‘elements’ and more on the enabling work of the Spirit. For instance, within the Reformed tradition the affirmation of the possibility of salvation for a non-Christian hinges not on the notion of a ‘good’ person, but rather on the idea of divine election. As the Westminster Confession states:

Elect infants, dying in infancy, are regenerated, and saved by Christ, through the Spirit, who works when, and where, and how he pleases: so also are all other elect persons who are incapable of being outwardly called by the ministry of the Word.Footnote 103

Thus, at least in the case of an adult, the concept of actual grace might help explain how the Spirit – ‘who works when, and where, and how he pleases’ – prepares an ‘elect’ unevangelized person for a future hearing and reception of the gospel. For Scripture teaches that salvation in Christ, even for the unevangelized elect, is by grace through faith alone and faith comes only from hearing the preaching of the gospel.Footnote 104

The point is, even though Catholics and Protestants have different theological maps, perhaps the concept of ‘actual grace’ can serve as a kind of standard theological compass to guide the conversation towards a mutual destination; i.e., towards a common Christian witness on the issue. To be sure, this proposal offers only a partial resolution to Tan's assessment. Still left unresolved is his argument that D'Costa's analogous use of the limbo of the just falls short of explaining the salvation of non-Christians, since its theological purpose is to explain the salvation of Old Testament figures who had exhibited explicit faith before death. Nevertheless, D'Costa is right to seek a way forward in the discussion by reference to the teachings of Christ's descent into hell. Indeed, Oakes (Catholic) and Biesbrouck (Protestant) both recommend solutions that focus on the nature of the intermediate state after the time of Christ's descent and resurrection.Footnote 105 In light of such efforts, the hope is that this article will aid the ecumenical discussion by providing a concordant understanding of how God, by grace, might prepare an unevangelized person for a prospective encounter with the church's proclamation of the gospel and the reality of Christ.

References

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22 Ibid., 104.

23 Ibid., 105.

24 Ibid., 106.

25 See, Ibid., 103-108.

26 Ibid., 190.

27 D'Costa, Christianity and World Religions, 189.

28 For example, see, DS 693.

29 D'Costa, Christianity and World Religions, 167.

30 Ibid., 189. D'Costa reaffirms and further develops this position in, Vatican II: Catholic Doctrines on Jews and Muslims (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).

31 Ibid., 162.

32 Ibid., 165.

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45 Ibid., 168.

46 Ibid.

47 Clement of Alexandria, The Stromata (6.6), trans. William Wilson, New Advent, accessed August 1, 2014, http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/02101.htm.

48 D'Costa, Christianity and World Religions, 170.

49 Ibid. Also see, Roberts, Alexander, Donaldson, James, and Coxe, A. Cleveland, eds., The Shepherd of Hermas (9.16:5-7), trans. Crombie, F., vol. 2 (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing, 1885)Google Scholar, accessed April 21, 2016, http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/02013.htm; Book III, Ch. 16.

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52 Ibid.

53 Ibid., 172-173.

54 Ibid., 174.

55 Ibid.

56 Ibid., 176.

57 Ibid., 177.

58 Ibid.

59 Ibid., 174.

60 Ibid., 174-175.

61 See, D'Costa, Gavin, Theology and Religious Pluralism: The Challenge of Other Religions, (Oxford: Blackwell, 1986)Google Scholar.

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63 Ibid, 19-25, 37.

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66 D'Costa, Theology and Religious Pluralism, 18.

67 Tan, “Gavin D'Costa's Trinitarian,” 14; quote from, D'Costa, , “Towards a Trinitarian Theology of Religions,” in A Universal Faith?, eds. Cornille, C. and Necke-Brouck, V. (Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans, 1991), 140Google Scholar.

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72 Ibid., 102-103.

73 Ibid., 103; emphasis original.

74 Ibid.

75 D'Costa, Christianity and World Religions, 175.

76 Ibid., 189.

77 D'Costa, Gavin, “Traditions and Reception: Interpreting Vatican II's ‘Declaration on the Church's Relation to Non-Christian Religions’,” New Blackfriars 92, no. 1040 (July 2011): 500CrossRefGoogle Scholar; emphasis added.

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79 Ibid., 23; emphasis original.

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83 Ibid., 237.

84 Ibid., 238.

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86 See especially, D'Costa, Vatican II, 99-105.

87 For example, see, D'Costa, The Meeting of Religions and the Trinity, 101-109.

88 Tan, “Gavin D'Costa's Trinitarian,” 15; emphasis original.

89 Ibid., 15; quoting, D'Costa, The Meeting of Religions and the Trinity, 108-109.

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91 John Paul II, “Redemptoris Missio,” 29.

92 D'Costa, The Meeting of Religions and the Trinity, 108-109; quoting, John Paul II, “Redemptoris Missio,” 29.

93 D'Costa, Christianity and World Religions, 211.

94 Ibid., 162.

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99 Ibid.

100 See, Tan, “Gavin D'Costa's Trinitarian,” 101-102.

101 Ibid.

102 D'Costa, Vatican II, 99.

103 “Westminster Confession of Faith,” Center for Reformed Theology and Apologetics, A.10.3, accessed August 28, 2014, http://www.reformed.org/documents/wcf_with_proofs/index.html.

104 This statement reflects Romans 10:17 and the five solae of Protestantism – sola Scriptura, sola fide, sola gratia, solus Christus, and soli Deo gloria.

105 See, Oakes, Edward T., “Descensus and Development: A Response to Recent Rejoinders,” International Journal of Systematic Theology 13, no. 1 (January 2011): 19-23CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Biesbrouck, “Extra Ecclesiam,” 132.