Grace Perfects Nature: Hooker on Nature's Threefold Need for the Supernatural
Wednesday, March 28, 2012 at 2:44PM (The following is a fragment of a thesis chapter draft I've been working up; it restates and repackages a number of matters that I've touched on here before, hopefully in a more satisfying and systematic way.)
Although Hooker lays great stress on the independent integrity and perspicacity of the order of nature, which has moral weight on its own, apart from the provision of special revelation, Hooker's valorization of reason and nature is often overstated by his interpreters. In fact, I would suggest, there are three crucial qualifications on the "autonomy" of nature and reason. First, nature and reason cannot be autonomous in the sense of encompassing their own end; nature cannot be considered a self-enclosed compartment, nor can reason be satisfied merely with the task of investigating creation. This much is clear already from Hooker’s inclusion of the first great commandment as one of the prescriptions of the law of reason, however, he will have much more to say in support of this claim in Book I, chapter 11, insisting that man’s final end is one beyond nature—God. Second, nature and reason cannot be autonomous in the sense of being capable, on their own, of reaching their final, supernatural end. On this point, Hooker is particularly nuanced, attributing most of this incapacity to the reality of sin, but acknowledging a dependence on divine grace even in the state of innocence. Third, nature and reason cannot be autonomous in the sense that the gift of revelation serves solely to provide a path to the supernatural end, and leaves reason perfectly adequate on its own for all natural purposes. Let us investigate each of these three points in turn.






