Study Guide to Doctrine of the
Knowledge of God
John M. Frame
Lesson 1, pp. 1-40
Key Terms
epistemology (2, 85)
lordship attributes (17)
object of knowledge (9f, 26)
lordship (12) essential
disproportion (24)
covenant (12) quantitative
difference (23)
transcendence (13ff) difference
in mode (23)
immanence (13ff) accommodation
(24)
wholly other (13) qualitative
difference (24f,
wholly hidden (13) 38ff)
control (15f) true
belief (26f)
authority (16) secondary
creation (27ff, 99f)
covenant solidarity (16f) adequate
idea (29f)
absolute authority (17) essence
of God (30ff)
thought content (37f)
Questions
1.
"The nature of knowledge depends on the nature of the object of
knowledge." Explain, evaluate (9ff).
2.
"We cannot know God without knowing other things." Explain,
evaluate (9f; also 62ff).
3.
Show how Lordship is (or is not!) a central biblical
concept (11f).
4.
What are some of the problems in saying that God is "wholly other? (13f,
15f)" Why do people want to say that?
5.
Same for "God is worldly (13f)."
6.
Explain the rectangular diagram on p. 14, indicating the meaning of each
corner and line.
7.
"Only in Christianity (and in other religions influenced by the
Bible) is there such a concept as a `personal absolute'" (17).
Explain, evaluate.
8.
"Everyone knows God" (18). What if someone says he doesn't?
9.
"Even unfallen Adam might have erred" (20).
State Frame's reasons for saying this and evaluate.
10.
"Even a perfect creaturely knowledge would be limited" (21).
Explain, evaluate.
11.
Describe Van Til's position in the
12.
Describe Clark's position in the
13.
List some discontinuities between God's knowledge and ours (22-25).
14.
"God's thoughts are self-validating" (22). Explain and evaluate.
15.
List some continuities between God's thoughts
and ours (25-29).
16.
"We, too, gain our knowledge by knowing ourselves" (27).
Explain, evaluate.
17.
"Even the norms by which we think must be adopted by us" (27).
Explain, evaluate.
18.
Explain, evaluate Frame's argument that our thoughts are "secondary
creators" (27f, 99f).
19.
Do we know the essence of God? Why or why not (30ff)?
20.
Do we know God in himself? Explain (32ff).
21.
Does a piece of language have the same meaning for God as it does for a
man who rightly understands it? Explain (33f).
22.
Is all language about God figurative? Explain (34-37).
Lesson 2, pp. 40-49
Key Terms
knowledge of God (40-49) presupposition
(45, 125f)
wisdom (48f) ultimate
presupposition (")
truth (48f)
Questions
1.
"Knowledge of God is a covenantal relationship." Explain,
evaluate (40ff).
2.
How is our knowledge of God a knowledge
about God's lordship (40-41)?
3.
What is meant by a knowledge subject to God's
control (42)?
4.
State some relationships between obedience and knowledge (42-45).
5.
Show how "presuppositions" are related to the lordship of God
over human thought (45, 125f).
6.
"To know (God) is to be involved with him as a friend or as an
enemy" (47). Explain, evaluate.
Lesson 3, 49-75
Key Terms
psychological repression (52) application
(66-68, 81-85, 93-98)
purely formal agreement (52f) subject
(69-71)
truth in isolation (53) object
(69-71; cf. 9f, 26)
proposition (26, 54-57) brute
fact (71, 78; cf. 28f,
assent (54-57) 68,
117ff, 140, 145)
fiducia (54) fact
(65ff, 71-73, above refs.)
conflicting assents (55f, 59) interpretation
(71ff)
rationalism (60f) perspectives
(73-75, 89f,
irrationalism (60f) 190-194)
covenant law (62f) normative
perspective (75)
meaning (66-68, 81-85, 93-98) situational
perspective (")
existential perspective (")
Questions
1.
How is the unbeliever's knowledge similar to the believer's (49f)?
2.
How is it different (summarize) (49-59)?
3.
"Unbelievers ought to know, but don't." Reply (51).
4.
"Unbelievers psychologically repress the truth." Reply (52).
5.
"Agreements between believers and unbelievers are purely
formal." Reply (52f).
6.
"Unbelievers may say things that are true in isolation, but these are
always false in the total context." Reply (53).
7.
"Unbelievers speak truth when they are unreflective, but there is no
truth in their systems of thought." Reply (53f).
8.
"The unbeliever's problem is that he doesn't believe enough
propositions." Reply (54-57).
9.
"The unbeliever knows facts about God, but rebels against him."
Reply (57f).
10.
May an unbeliever accept any true propositions concerning God (58f)?
11.
Interpret the lines and corners of the rectangular diagram (14) in terms
of rationalism and irrationalism (60f).
12.
"Epistemology can be a branch of ethics." Explain, evaluate (63,
cf. 73-75, 108f, 149, 248, 384).
13.
"Knowing God involves knowing the law." Explain, evaluate (62f,
cf. 9f). Also explain and evaluate the following:
14.
"Knowing God involves knowing the world" (64).
15.
"Knowing God involves knowing ourselves" (64f).
16.
"We need the law to understand the world" (65f).
17.
"We need the world to understand the law" (66-68).
18.
"Meaning is application" (66f, 81-85, 93-98).
19.
"The non-Christian loses the facts and the law" (68f).
20.
"We know ourselves by knowing the world, and
vice versa" (69-71).
21.
"Only the Christian has the conceptual resources for distinguishing
between persons and things" (71).
22.
"Facts and interpretations are inseparable," (71-73, 99f).
23.
How does the Christian avoid reducing subject to object, vice versa (70f)?
24.
Can faith be "founded on fact" (71-73)?
Lesson 4, 76-100
Key Terms
theology (Kuyper) (76) encyclopedia
(91)
theology ("ballpark def.") (77) bedrock (92, cf. 72)
theology (Schleiermacher) (77) syntactic
(94)
theology (Hodge) (77) semantic
(94)
objectivism (80) pragmatic
(95)
subjectivism (77) behavioral
def. (95)
theology (Frame) (81ff) mental
image " (95)
philosophy (85-87) intention
" (95f)
metaphysics (85) understanding
of original
value theory (85) audience
(96)
science (86f) verification def. (96f)
apologetics (87) use " (97)
neutral reasoning (87) state of affairs
(99)
Questions
1.
"There is no one `right' definition of theology." Explain,
evaluate (76).
2.
Formulate and evaluate Schleiermacher's definition of theology (77).
3.
Formulate and evaluate Hodge's definition of theology (77-81).
4.
Why is it important to note that Scripture is language (79)?
5.
"Theology is application" (81ff). Explain, evaluate.
6.
"Meaning is application" (82-85, 93-98). Explain, evaluate.
7.
Why is neutral reasoning forbidden (85-88)?
8.
Describe and evaluate Frame's contention that perspectivalism is
distinctively reformed (89f).
9.
How does faith keep us from constructing a "crazy" world (100)?
Lesson 5, 101-139
Key Terms
knowledge (philosophical sense experience (113)
def.)
(104) sense-datum (118f)
justification (104) paradox of analysis (114f)
normative justification (108) person-variable (119)
situational "
" foundationalism
(128f)
existential "
" circularity
(130-133)
rationalism (110, 111ff) narrow circle (131)
a priorism
(110) broad circle
(131)
empiricism (110, 115ff) paranoid analogy (132)
subjectivism (110, 119ff) coherence (133f)
a priori (112) hierarchies (137ff)
probability
(136)
Questions
1.
"You can have a reason without being able to give a reason."
Explain, evaluate (105).
2.
Is justification necessary to knowledge (104-106)?
3.
Is epistemology absolutely necessary (106)?
4.
"Epistemological questions depend on substantive questions."
Explain, evaluate (105).
5.
"A person cannot learn everything he knows from proofs."
Explain, evaluate (105).
6.
"Often the search for a foundation for knowledge is theologically
objectionable." Explain, evaluate (106).
7.
Refute rationalism. How does it lead to irrationalism (111-115)?
8.
"The rationalist's difficulties have a spiritual origin."
Explain, evaluate (114).
9.
Refute empiricism (115-119).
10.
"Religious thought is speculative, while scientific thought is based
on fact." Reply (116f).
11.
Is the possibility of scientific verification essential to knowledge? Why
or why not (116)?
12.
"The problems of empiricism are essentially spiritual." Explain,
evaluate (119).
13.
Refute subjectivism (119-121).
14.
"God's lordship extends to our knowledge." Argue pro or con from
Scripture (123-125).
15.
"Non-Christians are neutral, but Christians are biased." Reply
(126).
16.
What is "odd" about religious beliefs (126-127)?
17.
"Sacramento is the capital of California." Does Scripture
justify that statement? How (128-129)?
18.
Is this book foundationalist? Why or why not (129)?
19.
How is belief in Scripture justified (129f)?
20.
"Presupposing Christianity while arguing for it is circular and
therefore fallacious." Reply (130-133).
21.
Formulate and discuss the "problem of competing circularities"
(132).
22.
Is coherence a legitimate test of truth? Discuss (133-134).
23.
Is certainty possible? How (134-136)?
24.
Why do we sometimes fail to feel certain (136)?
25.
Does probability play any role in the verification of Christianity (136)?
26.
Does anything in the Bible take precedence over anything else? Discuss
(137-139).
Lesson 6, 140-164
Key Terms
correspondence (141f) cognitive rest (152f)
evidence (142) dokimazein (154)
pragmatic theory (150) seeing as (156-158)
persuasion (151)
Questions
1.
Is correspondence a legitimate test of truth (141f)?
Why or why not?
2.
Can evidence justify faith? If so, how do our presuppositions fit into
this process of evidential justification (142-144)?
3.
How does Scripture relate God's word to his works (144-148)?
4.
"The unbeliever knows nothing truly." Comment, recalling our
earlier discussion of this question (149, cf. 49-61).
5.
"Truth is what works." Explain, evaluate (150f).
6.
"Cognitive rest is like a feeling." Explain (152f).
7.
Describe the role of the Holy Spirit in leading us to cognitive rest
(153-158).
8.
How does Scripture tell us to "prove" God's will (154).
9.
What does DKG suggest as a possible response to an apparently irresolvable
theological dispute (155)? Reply.
10.
Explain the process of conviction of sin in terms of "seeing as"
(156-158).
11.
"There is a kind of knowledge possessed by the church rather than by
the individuals within the church." Explain, evaluate (158-160).
12.
Is the doctrine of "cognitive rest" a form of subjectivism?
Discuss (161f).
13.
Which perspective is ultimate (162-164)?
14.
"Justification in apologetics is the same as in theology."
Explain and evaluate (164).
Lesson 7, 167-68, 191-214
Key Terms
anti-abstractionism (171) pictures (204f)
sentence-level exegesis (195) windows (204f)
proof text (197) mirrors (204f)
exemplarism (198) data
(205)
telos (199) warrants (205, n)
proposition (200, 26, 54) backing (205, n)
speech act (203) exegetical theology (206)
locutionary act (203) biblical
theology (207)
illocutionary act (203) systematic theology (212)
perlocutionary act (203) practical
theology (214)
Questions
1.
"There is... no such thing as a `theological method' in the sense of
a series of definite steps by which all theological problems can be
solved." Why not (168)?
2.
List some perspectival relationships in theology
(191f).
3.
"God's Word tends to present relationships perspectivally because it
reflects the nature of God himself, I would surmise." Explain and
evaluate (192).
4.
"We must beware of assuming that there is one single `master context'
that must always be in view." Explain and evaluate.
5.
Discuss values and dangers in prooftexts (197).
6.
Discuss values and dangers in the use of biblical characters as examples
(198).
7.
"...in one sense, the meaning of any text is indefinite." What
sense is that? Evaluate.
8.
Discuss values and dangers in the use of allegory (199).
9.
How is the purpose of a text definite? Indefinite (199f)?
10.
Is biblical "authority" the same as "inerrancy?"
Is Scripture a "propositional revelation?" Discuss (200f).
11.
Show how the authoritative aspects of Scripture are perspectivally related
(201).
12.
Show how literary forms in Scripture are perspectivally related (202f).
13.
Show how the "traditional theological programs"
are perspectivally related 206-214).
14.
List some values and limitations of biblical theology (207-212).
15.
"Scripture is a redemptive history but not only that." Explain,
evaluate (209).
16.
"Biblical theology does more justice than systematic theology to the
centrality of Christ." Reply (210).
17.
"Biblical theology is more biblical than systematic theology."
Reply (211).
18.
"A preacher should never apply Scripture. He should simply narrate
redemptive history and allow the listener to draw his own
conclusions." Reply (211).
19.
"Exegetical and biblical theology also depend on systematics."
Explain, evaluate (213).
20.
Discuss the meaning and value of the term "systematic" in the
phrase "systematic theology" (213).
21.
"`Exegetical,' `biblical' and `systematic' theology are all
misnomers." Explain, evaluate (213).
Lesson 8, 215-241
Key Terms
family resemblances (218f) distribution (236)
technical term (222) static (236)
master metaphor (227) dynamic (236)
false disjunctions (234) relational (236)
dualisms (235f) particle (236)
contrast (236) wave (236)
variation (236) field (236)
systematic
ambiguity (237)
Questions
1.
"...there are many possible ways to refer to the world by means of
language..." Explain, evaluate (217).
2.
Is it always legitimate to demand a definition? Discuss (219f).
3.
Is Scripture ever vague (221)?
4.
Discuss values, limitations of the use of technical terms (222-226).
5.
"Never use technical terms with non-Christian histories." Reply
(222).
6.
"Don't confuse technical definitions with Biblical uses."
Describe the danger here (223).
7.
"There is no one right set of technical definitions."
Why? Evaluate (223f).
8.
"Some technical definitions can actually mislead us."
How (224)?
9.
Describe and discuss the liberal distortion of Scripture through an
illegitimate development of technical terminology (224f).
10.
Discuss the "danger of trying too hard to eliminate vagueness from
theology" (225).
11.
..."we should not seek to impose upon church officers a form of
creedal subscription intended to be maximally precise." Discuss
(225f, cf. 308f).
12.
"Sometimes, metaphors come to our rescue in theology." How? Give
an example (226f).
13.
"Often, in fact, figurative language says more, and says it more
clearly, than corresponding literal language would do." Discuss,
using an example (228f).
14.
"Use of a metaphor may be helpful in one context, misleading in
another." Discuss, using examples (228).
15.
Discuss possible cases in which there is "danger in using metaphors
where more literal language is needed" (228f).
16.
"Everything is comparable to God." Discuss (230f).
17.
Do we need special technical terms to refer to God's transcendence?
Discuss (231).
18.
"The history of doctrine, too, has progressed very largely by
negation." Explain, evaluate (232).
19.
"...some doctrines have very little meaning except for their negative
function of excluding heresy." Discuss, referring to examples (233).
20.
"Everything is `a matter of' everything else." Discuss (234).
21.
"Theologians should often use `not merely' instead of `not.'"
Discuss. Can you think of any examples (234f)?
22.
"The `dualism' critique often becomes... a word-level rather than a
sentence-level critique." Discuss (235).
23.
How are non-orthodox positions "systematically vague?" Can you
give an example (237)?
24.
Discuss values, dangers in labelling (237f).
25.
"Thus we may think we have a clear idea of the meaning of the term,
when all we really have is a feeling." Discuss. Try to think of an
example (238f).
26.
What methods will help us to recognize ambiguities (239)?
27.
Why the "linguistic turn" in recent philosophy and theology
(239f)?
28.
"Language is an indispensable element of the image of God."
Expound (240f).
Lesson 9, 242-301
Key Terms
logic (244) dilemma (275)
argument (244) a fortiori (276f)
implication (244) throwaway argument (277)
inference (244) irrelevant conclusion
entailment (244) (279f)
premise (244) ad baculum (281f)
conclusion (244) comparative ad hominem
valid (245) (282)
consistency (246) circumstantial ad hominem
law of noncontradiction (positive) (284ff)
(246,
258f) circumstantial ad
hominem
innate idea (249) (negative) (286f)
convention (249) argument from silence (287)
analytic (250, 268f) appeal to pity (288)
synthetic (250 268f) appeal to emotion (288ff)
Godel theorems (257) appeal
to authority (290)
law of excluded middle (259) false cause (290f)
necessary condition genetic fallacy (291f)
(261,
293) efficient cause
(292)
sufficient condition (261) final cause (292)
causal priority (262) formal cause (292)
teleological priority (263) material cause (292)
instrumental priority (263) instrumental cause (292)
moral/legal causality (263) material implication (292)
pedagogical priority (263) judicial/moral causality
supralapsarianism (264) (292)
infralapsarianism (264) necessary causality (293)
order of decrees (264) multiple causation (293ff)
ordo salutis (265) complex question (295f)
burden of proof (270) equivocation (296f)
deduction (271) amphiboly (297)
induction (272) accent (297f)
reductio ad absurdum fallacy
of composition (298f)
(273) fallacy of division
(299f)
slippery slope (274) denying the antecedent (300)
affirming
the consequent
(300f)
Questions
1.
"Implication is something that pervades our experience." How?
Discuss (245).
2.
"Logic is a hermeneutical tool." Explain, evaluate (247).
3.
Define the nature of the logical "must" (247f).
4.
"Logic is dependent on ethical values." Explain, evaluate (248).
5.
What is the nature of logical certainty (249-251)?
6.
Is it biblically legitimate to use logic in theology? Does such use of
logic conflict with sola Scriptura?
Discuss (251-254).
7.
If you cannot handle the complications of formal logic, what is the next
best thing to do? Why? Discuss (254).
8.
Discuss some limitations of logic (254-260).
9.
"We cannot learn all we know from logical proofs."
Explain, evaluate (256).
10.
"Apparent contradiction is insufficient ground for rejecting a
position." Discuss (257f).
11.
"Human logic is never a final test of truth." Why? Discuss
(258).
12.
"`Logical order' is an ambiguous expression." Explain (260-267).
13.
Analyze the controversy between the supra- and infralapsarians (264f).
14.
"Theological doctrines have a tendency to become analytic."
Explain, evaluate using examples (267-270).
15.
Give some examples of theological discussions in which the burden of proof
is an important issue. Show why (270f).
16.
Give examples of some of the argument types listed on 271-278.
17.
Give examples of some of the fallacies listed on 278-301.
Lesson 10, 302-346
Key Terms
heretic (306) perception (332)
progress in theology experience (332)
(three
views) sensation (332)
(307) emotions (335f)
confession/theology imagination (340)
distinction will (343)
(309ff) habits (344)
historical theology knowing how (345;
(310) cf.
44-48)
dogmatics (311) knowing
that (345;
naturalistic fallacy cf. 44-48)
(313) intuition (345f)
heart (322)
reason (329f)
Questions
1.
Describe a Protestant view of the relation between Scripture and tradition
(304).
2.
Why have a creed (304f)?
3.
Why is it impossible to have a perfect creed (305f)?
4.
Discuss the relation of creeds to church unity (306).
5.
What is "progress in theology?" Distinguish a sound view of such
progress from unsound alternatives (307f).
6.
"...of all the forms of Protestantism, Reformed theology has been one
of the most successfully `contextualized.'" Explain and evaluate
(307f).
7.
"Subscription to a `system of doctrine' is too vague." Reply
(308f).
8.
Discuss values, weaknesses of the "dogmatic" model of theology
(311-314).
9.
Define and discuss the "problem of confusing historical description
with authoritative teaching" (312).
10.
Discuss the theory that theology is an accumulation of facts to be passed
from one generation to another (313f).
11.
How does science help theology (314-318)?
12.
Is theology queen of the sciences? Why or why not (316)?
13.
"When a theologian appears to be selling out to `modern science,' it
is necessary to examine his @UN(theological) rationale." Explain and
evaluate (317).
14.
In what ways is theology "personalistic"
(319-322)?
15.
Do you believe in "the resuscitation of Jesus' corpse? Why or why
not? Discuss problems here (321).
16.
"Theology should discuss only the issues, not personalities."
Discuss (321f).
17.
"Qualifications of teachers in Scripture are largely qualities of
character." Show this by reference to some specific texts (324).
18.
"Multi-perspectivalism enables you to build on the @UN(strengths) of
your opponent." Explain, evaluate (328).
19.
Discuss "the primacy of the intellect in theology" (328-332).
20.
"Emotions contribute toward rational judgments." How? Evaluate
(335-340).
21.
"Reason and feeling are coterminous." Explain and evaluate
(338).
22.
"Emotion is part of Scripture's content." Explain, evaluate
(339).
23.
How, if at all, does imagination contribute to theology (340-343)?
24.
How is "will" a perspective on knowing (343f)?
Lesson 11, 347-402
Key Terms
defensive apologetics (348) sentence-level criticism (370)
offensive apologetics (348) metatheology
(380)
evidentialist apologetics Hartford
Declaration (380)
(353) three functions of
doctrine
traditional apologetics (Lindbeck) (381)
(353) epistemic rights
(384)
Pascal's wager (356) epistemic obligations
(384)
scripturality (369) evidentialist challenge (385)
cogency (369) classical foundationalism
(386)
edification (369) basic beliefs (386, 398f)
godliness (369) properly basic
(386, 398f)
clarity (369) situated rationality (395)
profundity (370) objective rationality (395)
emphasis (as criterion) point of contact (366)
(370) expository paper
(371)
comparability (") (") party lines (371)
terminology (") (")
word-level criticism
(370)
Questions
1.
In an apologetic encounter, must we always talk about presuppositions
(350f)?
2.
Discuss how a reformed apologist can make use of the evidentialist
literature (352-354).
3.
How is rationalism irrationalistic (361; cf. 60f)?
4.
How is irrationalism rationalistic (361f; cf. 60f)?
5.
How are rationalism and irrationalism parasitic on Christianity (362f)?
6.
How does unbelief encourage unclarity (363f)?
Factual errors? Logical errors?
7.
Discuss ambiguities in "point of contact" (366f).
8.
What is Paul doing in Acts 17:16-34? Is this
"neutral" argumentation? Why or why not (367f)?
9.
"In writing theological papers, anticipate objections." Explain,
evaluate (373f).
10.
List the Lindbeck's three functions of
theology. Analyze critically his proposal (380f).
11. Analyze critically the Plantinga-Wolterstorff defense of the rationality of Christian belief (380-402). _