
by John Frame
This article is taken from Walter Elwell,
ed., Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1984),
987. Used by permission of Baker Academic, a division of Baker Publishing
Group, copyright 2006. All rights to this material are reserved. Materials are
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Scientia Media. Literally
"middle knowledge." Many theologians have said that God knows the world by knowing
himself. He knows what is possible or impossible in the world by knowing what he can or cannot do: this knowledge
is called the knowledge of simple
intelligence or necessary knowledge
(since it follows from the very
nature of God's being). He also knows what actually takes place in the world (whether past, present, or future from our point of view) by knowing his own plan, his decree for the world: this knowledge is called the knowledge of vision or free knowledge (since it follows from God's free decisions concerning the world process). Such a distinction was made by Thomas Aquinas and
his Dominican followers. But in the sixteenth century the theologians of the new Jesuit order, particularly Luis
Molina, seeking to restate the Roman
Catholic theology in opposition to the challenges of Protestantism and Jansenism, found this distinction inadequate
to do justice to human freedom. They introduced a third form of divine
knowledge, a middle knowledge or scientia
media. This knowledge (a) is a
knowledge of what would happen under such-and-such conditions,
and (b) is based, neither upon God's nature
nor upon his decree, but upon the
free decisions of created beings. Thus
God knows what will happen if David remains
in Keilah, and what will happen if he does not (I Sam. 23:1-13); and he knows it, not because he controls the course of history, but because he
knows what free decisions people
will make independently of his controlling decree. This concept found favor with Lutherans (e.g., Quenstedt) and with Arminius and some of his followers. The Reformed agree that God knows what would happen under all conditions, but they reject the
notion that this knowledge is ever ultimately based on man's autonomous
decisions. Human decisions, they argue, are themselves the effects of God's
eternal decrees (see Acts 2:23, Rom. 9:10-18, Eph. 1:11, Phil. 2:12-13). J. M.
Frame.
Bibliography:
H. Bavinck, The Doctrine of God; H. Heppe, Reformed Dogmatics; C.
Hodge, Systematic Theology I, 397-401.