Divine Sovereignty and the Dissolution of Pragmatic Tension: Faith, Works, and the Effectual Will of God
The notion that the relationship between faith and works—or, more fundamentally, between divine sovereignty and human agency—must be understood as an unresolved tension is not a testament to profound piety or theological humility but rather a subtle capitulation to pragmatic theological reasoning that ultimately diminishes the sovereignty of God. This persistent tension suggests that the divine voluntas is somehow contingent on or dialectically intertwined with creaturely resistance, implying that God’s sovereign decree is perpetually thwarted, neutralized, or qualified by human effort or opposition. Such a view reduces the divine will to a mere possibility rather than an unchangeable imperium, transforming scriptural exhortations into oscillations between divine command and human impotence.
The Ontological Incoherence of Perpetual Antinomy
Maintaining an unbridgeable tension between divine omnipotence and human incapacity implies that the Creator’s will operates within an internal contradiction, as if the Deus immutabilis, who spoke the cosmos into existence ex nihilo by fiat (Genesis 1; Psalm 33:9), now finds His redemptive and creative purposes perpetually qualified by the autonomous will of the creature. This framework introduces an ontological incoherence, rendering divine sovereignty pragmatic and ultimately impotent—if it depends on, or is obstructed by, creaturely resistance, then it ceases to be sovereignty in the full biblical sense. In reality, an infinitely sovereign God, who is not limited or hindered by creaturely resistance, does not endure such a perpetual antinomy; His will is not suspended in a dialectical equipoise but is effectually and eternally accomplished, fully and without fail.
The Harmonious Integration of Divine and Human Agency in Scripture
Scripture, however, presents a different picture: the divine will is efficacious and harmoniously integrated with creation. The apostle Paul affirms this in Philippians 2:13: “for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure,” indicating that divine activity and human response are woven into a single, graced economy. The exhortation to “work out your own salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12) is not an antithesis to divine monergism but flows directly from it—demonstrating that human effort, in the context of grace, is a participatory act rooted in divine initiative, devoid of any paradoxical opposition.
Augustinian Grace: Recreative Power and the Elimination of Tension
Augustine of Hippo, in his decisive anti-Pelagian writings such as De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio and De Praedestinatione Sanctorum, provides a robust biblical and theological demonstration that unresolved tension between divine sovereignty and human will is an illusion. He argues that grace does not merely cooperate with a neutral or autonomous human will; rather, grace recreates and renews the will itself. Genuine obedience and the works that manifest living faith are not equal partners with divine initiative but are the fruits of gratia operans (operative grace) and gratia cooperans (cooperative grace). These graces move and incline the human will without violating its mode of operation but transforming it from within. The psalmist’s penitential prayer, exemplified in Psalm 119:176—“I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek your servant”—captures this reality: even the desire to obey is itself a divine gift, a result of God's gracious work that restores and inclines the will toward obedience.
Thomistic Secondary Causality: Hierarchical Harmony of Causes
St. Thomas Aquinas furthers this harmony through his doctrine of secondary causality, as articulated in the Summa Theologica (I, q. 83; I-II, qq. 109–113). He teaches that God, as the Unmoved Mover and Primary Cause, so internally and infinitely inclines the created will that its acts remain genuinely free and voluntary, yet entirely dependent upon divine concursus. The human act, therefore, is not in tension with divine causality but operates within a hierarchical order where divine causality elevates and perfects natural causes without annihilating their integrity. To insist that divine sovereignty and human freedom cannot be harmonized is to regress into a dualism akin to Manichaeism. Aquinas affirms that grace perfects nature; it does not suspend or negate it. Instead, grace elevates and completes the natural faculties, establishing a unity that is both harmonious and causally efficacious, thereby securing divine sovereignty in all human acts.
Biblical Refutation of Pragmatic Tension
The entire biblical canon vehemently opposes the idea of unresolved tension between divine sovereignty and human effort. Jesus declares in John 15:5, “Apart from me you can do nothing,” emphasizing the necessity of divine enablement for any genuine activity. The Apostle Paul echoes this in 1 Corinthians 15:10, asserting, “I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me,” illustrating that even human labor and perseverance are rooted in divine grace. Ephesians 2:8–10 encapsulates the unity of grace and works: salvation is by grace through faith, so that no one may boast, yet believers are “created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” These passages do not depict a dichotomy or unresolved tension but reveal a divine economy in which works are the necessary evidence and fruit of genuine faith. Any theological system that insists on paradoxical tension as an eternal truth diminishes the sovereignty of God, contradicting His promise in Isaiah 55:11 that His word “shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose.”
Conclusion: Toward the Sovereign God of Scripture
Any theological system that insists on maintaining perpetual tension between faith and works, divine grace and human response, ultimately confesses a limited or pragmatic view of God's sovereignty—one that portrays a deity whose will is not fully effective or entirely accomplished. Such a view aligns more with pragmatic cultural notions than with the biblical Deus qui est, the God who is fundamentally sovereign and whose purposes are unthwarted. The biblical witness, as exemplified by the psalmists, Augustine, and Aquinas, converges in affirming that true fidelity and obedience emerge when the creature, recognizing its utter dependence, is filled with divine grace through hierarchical and effectual means. Obedience, therefore, is neither an autonomous achievement nor a dialectical compromise but the natural and necessary outworking of the sovereign Word, which by its power creates and sustains what it commands. Only within this divine order, where the divine will is effectual and complete, can theology rightly honor the sovereignty of God and direct worship and service toward a God whose purposes are fully and eternally accomplished.
The notion that the relationship between faith and works—or, more fundamentally, between divine sovereignty and human agency—must be understood as an unresolved tension is not a testament to profound piety or theological humility but rather a subtle capitulation to pragmatic theological reasoning that ultimately diminishes the sovereignty of God. This persistent tension suggests that the divine voluntas is somehow contingent on or dialectically intertwined with creaturely resistance, implying that God’s sovereign decree is perpetually thwarted, neutralized, or qualified by human effort or opposition. Such a view reduces the divine will to a mere possibility rather than an unchangeable imperium, transforming scriptural exhortations into oscillations between divine command and human impotence.
The Ontological Incoherence of Perpetual Antinomy
Maintaining an unbridgeable tension between divine omnipotence and human incapacity implies that the Creator’s will operates within an internal contradiction, as if the Deus immutabilis, who spoke the cosmos into existence ex nihilo by fiat (Genesis 1; Psalm 33:9), now finds His redemptive and creative purposes perpetually qualified by the autonomous will of the creature. This framework introduces an ontological incoherence, rendering divine sovereignty pragmatic and ultimately impotent—if it depends on, or is obstructed by, creaturely resistance, then it ceases to be sovereignty in the full biblical sense. In reality, an infinitely sovereign God, who is not limited or hindered by creaturely resistance, does not endure such a perpetual antinomy; His will is not suspended in a dialectical equipoise but is effectually and eternally accomplished, fully and without fail.
The Harmonious Integration of Divine and Human Agency in Scripture
Scripture, however, presents a different picture: the divine will is efficacious and harmoniously integrated with creation. The apostle Paul affirms this in Philippians 2:13: “for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure,” indicating that divine activity and human response are woven into a single, graced economy. The exhortation to “work out your own salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12) is not an antithesis to divine monergism but flows directly from it—demonstrating that human effort, in the context of grace, is a participatory act rooted in divine initiative, devoid of any paradoxical opposition.
Augustinian Grace: Recreative Power and the Elimination of Tension
Augustine of Hippo, in his decisive anti-Pelagian writings such as De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio and De Praedestinatione Sanctorum, provides a robust biblical and theological demonstration that unresolved tension between divine sovereignty and human will is an illusion. He argues that grace does not merely cooperate with a neutral or autonomous human will; rather, grace recreates and renews the will itself. Genuine obedience and the works that manifest living faith are not equal partners with divine initiative but are the fruits of gratia operans (operative grace) and gratia cooperans (cooperative grace). These graces move and incline the human will without violating its mode of operation but transforming it from within. The psalmist’s penitential prayer, exemplified in Psalm 119:176—“I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek your servant”—captures this reality: even the desire to obey is itself a divine gift, a result of God's gracious work that restores and inclines the will toward obedience.
Thomistic Secondary Causality: Hierarchical Harmony of Causes
St. Thomas Aquinas furthers this harmony through his doctrine of secondary causality, as articulated in the Summa Theologica (I, q. 83; I-II, qq. 109–113). He teaches that God, as the Unmoved Mover and Primary Cause, so internally and infinitely inclines the created will that its acts remain genuinely free and voluntary, yet entirely dependent upon divine concursus. The human act, therefore, is not in tension with divine causality but operates within a hierarchical order where divine causality elevates and perfects natural causes without annihilating their integrity. To insist that divine sovereignty and human freedom cannot be harmonized is to regress into a dualism akin to Manichaeism. Aquinas affirms that grace perfects nature; it does not suspend or negate it. Instead, grace elevates and completes the natural faculties, establishing a unity that is both harmonious and causally efficacious, thereby securing divine sovereignty in all human acts.
Biblical Refutation of Pragmatic Tension
The entire biblical canon vehemently opposes the idea of unresolved tension between divine sovereignty and human effort. Jesus declares in John 15:5, “Apart from me you can do nothing,” emphasizing the necessity of divine enablement for any genuine activity. The Apostle Paul echoes this in 1 Corinthians 15:10, asserting, “I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me,” illustrating that even human labor and perseverance are rooted in divine grace. Ephesians 2:8–10 encapsulates the unity of grace and works: salvation is by grace through faith, so that no one may boast, yet believers are “created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” These passages do not depict a dichotomy or unresolved tension but reveal a divine economy in which works are the necessary evidence and fruit of genuine faith. Any theological system that insists on paradoxical tension as an eternal truth diminishes the sovereignty of God, contradicting His promise in Isaiah 55:11 that His word “shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose.”
Conclusion: Toward the Sovereign God of Scripture
Any theological system that insists on maintaining perpetual tension between faith and works, divine grace and human response, ultimately confesses a limited or pragmatic view of God's sovereignty—one that portrays a deity whose will is not fully effective or entirely accomplished. Such a view aligns more with pragmatic cultural notions than with the biblical Deus qui est, the God who is fundamentally sovereign and whose purposes are unthwarted. The biblical witness, as exemplified by the psalmists, Augustine, and Aquinas, converges in affirming that true fidelity and obedience emerge when the creature, recognizing its utter dependence, is filled with divine grace through hierarchical and effectual means. Obedience, therefore, is neither an autonomous achievement nor a dialectical compromise but the natural and necessary outworking of the sovereign Word, which by its power creates and sustains what it commands. Only within this divine order, where the divine will is effectual and complete, can theology rightly honor the sovereignty of God and direct worship and service toward a God whose purposes are fully and eternally accomplished.