Our natural means therefore unto blessedness are our works; nor is it possible that Nature should ever find any other way to salvation than only this. But examine the works that we do, and since the first foundation of the world what one can say, My ways are pure? Seeing then that all flesh is guilty of that for which God hath threatened eternally to punish, what possibility is there to be saved? (I,xi,5)
From salvation therefore and life all flesh being excluded this way, behold how the wisdom of God hath revealed a way mystical and supernatural, a way directing unto the same end of life by a course which groundeth itself upon the gultiness of sin, and through sin desert of condemnation of sin and death. For in this way the first thing is the tender compassion of God respecting us drowned and swallowed up in misery; the next is redemption out of the same by the precious death and merit of a mighty Saviour, which hath witnessed of himself, saying, 'I am the way," the way that leadeth us from misery into bliss. (I,xi,6)
We now have the following: Nature has a way of salvation, obedience to the natural law. No one follows that way, no one is pure. Therefore, all flesh is excluded from salvation and eternal life. But God, seeing our misery, has offered a way of salvation in Christ Jesus. Those who believe and persevere will be united with God, the risen Christ, and the company of the redeemed forever. Those who do not, who sin against the natural law or reject Christ, deserve the "condemnation of sin and death." I will now consider whether all people belong to God's family.
First, Hooker does not use the term "family" when discussing the fact that all persons were created by God. There is a society composed of all human beings, but it is not a family in which all are sons or daughters of God. Rather, for Hooker, there is the society of all persons, and then a smaller society, those who believe in Jesus Christ. The former he calls the sons of Adam, the latter he calls the sons of God, a title he reserves for the saved.
Let hereunto saving efficacy be added, and it bringeth forth a special offspring amongst men, containing them to whom God hath himself given the gracious and amiable name of sons. We are by nature the sons of Adam. When God created Adam he created us, and as many as are descended from Adam have in themselves the root out of which they spring. The sons of God we neither are all nor any one of us otherwise than only be grace and favour. The sons of God have God's own natural Son as a second Adam from heaven, whose race and progeny they are by spiritual and heavenly birth. (V,lvi,6)
When Hooker states that the "sons of God we neither are all," he is saying that not all will be saved. Only those who belong to the second Adam, Jesus Christ, those born from above, are those destined to be saved.
Nor did Hooker believe that Jesus Christ was one among many saviors. For him, following Scripture, Christ is the only savior. As the second quotation of this essay makes clear, God prepared a way through the "precious death and merit of a mighty Saviour" who claimed, and Hooker believed it literally, to be "the way."
Those who accept Jesus Christ form the Church. Apart from the Church, there is no salvation. The Church is "like the ark of Noah, that for anything we know to the contrary, all without it are like lost sheep; ... " (V,lxviii,6) The Church takes two forms, the saints of Israel before Christ and those who believe in Christ. (I,xiv,4; III,1,3) (See also Article VII of the Anglican Articles of Religion.) Within the Church, Hooker distinguished between the invisible (or mystical) and the visible Church. The mystical Church is the society of the saved, those who truly hear the call of God and respond in faith. They will be with God forever in heaven. Only God knows who they are. (III,i,2) The visible church consists of those who outwardly profess Jesus Christ. There are, however, members of the visible church who do not believe in their hearts that Christ is Lord. They may attend church, take Christ's name upon their lips, but inwardly they are not of Christ and will not be saved. They belong to the visible church but not the invisible church.
In short, from Hooker's point of view, only Christians are saved, and only those Christians who hold true to Christ. This may seem harsh since many have never heard the gospel of Jesus Christ. It must be said, however, that Hooker had a very high regard for the majesty, power, and authority of God. He believed the divine justice to be a mystery, a mystery we should honor above our own conceptions of justice. Perhaps, in light of I Peter 3:18-22, more could be said, but I find nothing in Hooker that would claim salvation for those who never heard of Christ. Hooker did believe that God had a "general inclination" that all be saved, but God also held "a more private occasioned will that determineth the contrary." (V,xlix,3). It is utterly clear, however, that Hooker, on the basis of Scripture and the best teaching of the Church Universal, believed that Jesus Christ is the only Savior, that not all are saved, and that the Church must, for the sake of the lost, proclaim the gospel at once to every person on earth. Further, it must be said that Hooker humbled himself before Scripture as before God. He was obedient to Scripture, not his own inclinations. Now let me return to the theme of the opening paragraphs of this essay, religion and the ongoing conflicts that devastate our worldHowbeit of the visible body and Church of Jesus Christ those may be and oftentimes are, ... most worthily both hateful in the sight of God himself, and in the eyes of the sounder parts of the visible Church most execrable. Our Saviour therefore compareth the kingdom of heaven to a net, whereunto all which cometh neither is nor seemeth fish; his Church he compareth unto a field, where tares manifestly known and seen by all men do grow intermingled with good corn, and even so shall continue till the final consummation of the world. (III,i,8)