Several years ago W. W. Otey told me that
during his seventy years of gospel preaching (he lived to be nearly 95),
he could not remember a single year that the Lord's church was not
passing through some kind of crisis. Even the casual observer who cannot
see that we have many serious problems before us today simply has his
eyes closed.
We cannot speak of just one problem; we have
many problems. One might begin by listing those whose modernistic views
would have us to "refocus" God, the Bible, and the church. There are
those who hold existentialistic views of sin, revelation, and the
church. There are false teachers who pander theistic evolution,
Antinomianism, "Anti-legalism," Pentecostalism, Institutionalism, and
even denominationalism. All of these are to be found within the church.
There are also those who are teaching perverted doctrines on grace and
fellowship. Some are materialistic, others are apathetic, and some are
just downright worldly. Indeed, we have a gamut of problems.
It helps very little to enumerate the
problems unless one has something to propose as a remedy. It should be
evident that with so many different ramifications of error, there must
be something basically wrong somewhere. Some brethren think it has been
so many times stated that only a simpleton yet would believe it. Call it
"trite," "naive," or what you will, but I must confess that I still
believe our basic trouble is nonetheless a difference in outlook and
attitude toward the Scripture.
More than ten years ago, Gary Freeman
(well-known religious satirist who writes in Mission magazine) was
living in Cleveland, Ohio, while I was living nearby in Akron. Gary once
wrote an article in which he scathingly reproached some whom he called
"Antis" as brethren who do nothing, but who merely object to what other
brethren are doing. In an article in reply, I called attention to the
fact that the church where Gary preached published in their financial
statement the expenditure of the astounding sum of $25 per month for
"mission work." Their contribution then was about $1,000.00 per week.
The "do-nothing" church for which I then preached was Brown Street in
Akron, Ohio. Our contribution was about $700.00 per week, but we were
spending $1500.00 to $2,000.00 per month in the support of gospel
preachers. Evidently it became embarrassingly apparent to Brother
Freeman as to which church was doing nothing, and which one was doing
the criticizing.
Soon after this exchange of articles, I was
conducting a meeting at nearby Berea, Ohio. Gary came to hear me preach,
and afterward initiated a discussion regarding our doctrinal
disagreements. As we attempted to discuss the areas wherein we disagree
(such as the congregational support of human institutions, and the
pooling of brotherhood resources to be spent as directed by the elders
of a sponsoring church), Gary finally became rather exasperated with me,
and said something like, "Brother, we have two entirely different
perspectives!" I think he was exactly right, and "these two entirely
different perspectives" result in the various areas of specific
disagreements.
No-Patternism
There are some of us who still believe the
Bible constitutes a divinely given blueprint, and that we must not
digress from the divinely given "pattern." (Read Heb. 8:5; 1 Cor.
4:6; 2 Jno. 9; 1 Pet. 4:11; Col. 3:17; Eph. 1:22,23.) There are
others who ridicule the idea of a divinely given blueprint, and who
would throw out completely and reject summarily the very concept of
restoring apostolic preaching and practice in this 20th century. Such
persons therefore are not upset by digression from the apostolic order
of worship, or by a perversion of congregational organization and
autonomy by one church becoming the agent for others, or by churches
functioning through human institutions.
David Edwin Harrell, Jr., in his 1973 book
The Social Sources of Division in the Disciples of Christ 1865-1900,
speaks of these two perspectives as being "diverging attitudes" (p. 16),
and showed how these divergent attitudes resulted in brethren moving
"slowly apart" (p. 32). The famous Disciples of Christ historian, Dr. A.
T. Degroot, candidly stated that the "pattern concept" was that which
led to division. In a 1940 book, The Grounds of Divisions Among the
Disciples of Christ, Degroot stated in his Christ, Degroot stated in his
Introduction:
"It is the purpose of the present work to
trace the genesis and exodus of the divisions which have come to pass in
the Restoration movement.... Having made our investigations in advance
of the writing of this Introduction, we are ready o set forth our
thesis, namely: that the principle of restoring a fixed pattern of a
primitive Christian church is divisive and not unitive" (p. 8).
The premise, as stated by Degroot and as
repeated by many other historians, led brethren down ever more divergent
paths. One was steadfastly holding to a first century pattern; the other
group could not care less for a restoration of the New Testament church
in the 20th century. As I heard one very liberal preacher put it: "Our
trouble is, we are trying to preach a horse and buggy religion, but we
are in the jet age!" Every brother who has contributed one little bit
toward obliterating the "follow the pattern" attitude must share in the
blame of the whole sordid mess about us today. The brother who 25 years
ago was out preaching his gospel of "God told us to do it, but did not
tell us how in order to try to justify something which he could not find
taught in Scripture must accept his share of blame for the prevalent
ultra-liberalism, which some of these preachers today pretend to abhor.
The younger generation have just carried what he taught them a little
further than he was willing to carry it. Consequently, they are
consistent but wrong; he is both inconsistent and wrong.
The Silence of
Scripture
Many of our differences could be compressed
into Adifferent perspectives" about the nature of God's silence. The
liberals have maintained that things not specifically condemned are
matters of liberty. Those with a Biblical perspective have maintained
that those things not authorized (either by generic or specific
authority) are hereby prohibited. Louis Cochran, also a Disciples of
Christ historian, accurately portrayed this divergence of perspectives
when he said:
"Did the silence of the Scripture bind them
to abstain, or loose them to perform? One group of men held that where
there is no prohibition there was no transgression. Another group saw
things differently. Where there was no clear command to act there was no
justification for action, and any step in that direction was a violation
of God's word." Captives of the Word, pp. 159, 160).
A.W. Fortune, yet another Disciples of
Christ historian, also correctly pin-pointed the basic disagreement
between liberals and conservatives a century ago. It has correctly
represents our basic disagreements today as it did a hundred years ago.
"There were two different interpretations of
the church which inevitably came into conflict. There were those who
believed the church should move on with the world and adapt the spirit
of the New Testament to conditions that were ever changing. They held
that, when not forbidden by the New Testament, they were free to adapt
their program to changing needs. On the other hand, there were those who
believed the pattern of the church was fixed for all time, and the fact
that certain things were not sanctioned was sufficient ground for
rejecting them. The men on both sides were equally honest, but they had
a different approach to these issues that were raised@ (The Disciples in
Kentucky, ( pp. 364-365).
Go back and read again all the "no-pattern"
and "no prohibition" arguments brethren have advanced the last 25 or 35
years, and it will help wonderfully to understand why brethren are in
such a quagmire today.
Apostolic Examples and
Necessary Inferences
Much theological manipulation has been
parlayed before the brethren for more than a quarter of a century to try
to avert the necessity of abiding by apostolic procedure in benevolent
work, and to avoid sending "wages" directly (i.e., not through a
sponsoring church) unto gospel preachers. We have seen these brethren
cut out the heart of the argument made for years that we must give
command, example, or necessary inference for all we preach or practice.
Older liberal brethren only have wanted to
avoid following certain apostolic examples that pertained to benevolence
and evangelism. But the "now generation," which has been fed throughout
their lives upon the diet of the denial of apostolic examples and
necessary inferences, are ready to discard the entire concept of
following apostolic examples, in spite of Paul's explicit order that we
follow his example (Phil. 4:9), and many now totally reject as essential
any inferential truths.
As recently as in the latest Firm Foundation
to arrive at my home (December 18, 1973 issue), we find a brother
advocating complete rejection of examples and necessary inferences. The
Firm Foundation writer (Michael Hall of Columbus, Ohio) said:
"This writer suggests (until a better and
more Biblical answer is suggested) that. . . 'matters of faith' are
those areas wherein there is a direct, explicit command that's binding
upon all people at all times! And thus, 'matters of opinion' are all
those areas which are deducted from inferences and examples and those
areas of private judgment of men concerning Bible subjects and themes. .
. . 'Matters of faith' are distinguished from 'matters of opinion' in
that the former are direct, expressly stated commands and the latter
aren't!" It would be interesting to hear this brother tell us why one
should partake of the Lord's Supper only upon the first day of the week,
and why one should not use mechanical instruments of music in worship.
Our Firm Foundation writer just shot himself out of the saddle, whether
he recognizes that he did so, or not.
Conclusion
The urgent need today is to recognize the
New Testament as the divinely given pattern for work and worship, to
recognize the prohibitory nature of God's silence, and to require
apostolic authority (command, or example, or necessary inference) for
all we teach and practice. When we determine to do these three things,
we will be on the way toward eradicating the sickening mess which
digression has brought into the churches.
Truth Magazine - October 31, 1974
Other Articles by
Cecil Willis
The Triumph of Grace in the Theology of Edward Fudge (Part 1)
The Triumph of Grace in the Theology of Edward Fudge (Part 2)
Creed Making
- Caffin,
B.C. (1950), II Peter – Pulpit Commentary, H.D.M. Spence
and Joseph Exell, eds. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans).
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