The Gordian Knot Nobody Has Untied
The problem runs through every serious theology without exception. Paul tells the Philippians to work out their salvation with fear and trembling, and then immediately grounds the command in God's sovereign working in them both to will and to do (Phil. 2:12–13). He doesn't pause to explain the relationship. He doesn't seem troubled by the juxtaposition. That exegetical fact alone should tell you something about the nature of the debate: the tension is not an oversight Scripture corrects elsewhere. It is structural. The same phenomenon appears in John 6, where Jesus says that all the Father gives him will come to him and that everyone who comes to him he will never cast out, in consecutive breaths, without apology. Or in Isaiah 10, where Assyria is simultaneously the rod of Yahweh's anger and a nation that will be punished for its own pride. Scripture doesn't treat these as problems awaiting philosophical resolution. It lets them stand, which is either an invitation ...