Was The
Apostle Paul the founder of
Christianity?
Did it take Martin Luther to explain
what The Apostle Paul meant?
Rom 3:4
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luther_Bible let Luther’s own words judge him.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Concord
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Jews_and_their_Lies Rev 5:5
http://www.encyclopedia.com/printable.aspx?id=1G1:156553127
I am not a Protestant, the church I
attend is not Protestant AND NEVER WAS! I do believe I attend God’s One and
Only True Church, do you think any less of your church? I am not Jewish I
believe Jesus Christ of Nazareth IS the
Living Son of God, He died for my sins and God raised Him from the dead. It
was determined that He would come as a sacrificial Lamb to be slain before the
foundation of the world. He rode into Jerusalem on a donkey and gave His life
for mankind’s sins. He is oing to return this earth
as THE conquering King of Kings riding a white horse and He will usher in The
Kingdom of God to rule this world. it has been
foretold in the Bible. Which I consider the greatest story EVER told, of God’s
great master plan for humanity from Genesis to the book of Revelation
By Faith Alone?
Martin
Luther's famous cry "by faith alone" would seem to leave little room
for works. Yet how we live our lives is vital to God, our fellow man and ourselves.
On
31st October, 1517, Martin Luther, the radical priest from Germany, turned the
religious world of his day upside down. He nailed his 95 theses, concerning the
sale of indulgences by the Church at Rome, to the door of the chapel at
Wittenberg Castle, and unwittingly started a revolution.
Did you catch that
“31st October” what else happens on “31st October”
frt
A Background to Luther's Position
Luther,
who spent three years as an Augustinian monk, was ordained a priest of the
Roman Catholic Church in 1507. He was appalled at the church corruption he
found while visiting Rome in 1517. In particular, the sale of indulgences
caused him great offence. An indulgence was intended by the church to be a
practical demonstration of repentance in a way that would benefit both the poor
and the church. But Luther saw that this was not in line with biblical
teaching. This practice had degenerated into a sale that became merely a
semblance of repentance. Luther pointed out that such practices had become a
cynical way of making money to finance church projects.
On
his return from Rome, Luther denounced the Dominican monk Johann Tetzel, who
had been sent from Rome by the Pope to sell indulgences that would finance the
rebuilding of St Peter's Basilica. Luther's criticism sparked a furore that led to even stronger attacks on what he saw as
a corrupt, unbiblical papal system, which at that time ruled most of Europe.
Luther wanted to see reform within the church, but his actions had enormous
historical implications, causing a fundamental schism that led to the emergence
of new Protestant denominations; Luther is considered the father of the
Protestant Reformation. Some 30 years later at the Council of Trent, an attempt
by the Catholic Church to bring about internal reform led to the
Counter-reformation.
Luther's
lifelong thinking about "works" would be conditioned by the
deficiencies and excesses of the Roman church, especially ideas about penance
and indulgences. The more Luther read his New Testament, the more he saw that
human works were not the way to God's righteousness. It was through belief
(faith) in the sacrifice of Jesus Christ that a person's sins could be forgiven
and one could be considered righteous in God's sight. Indulgences and the
giving of money to the church played no part.
By
Faith or by Faith Alone?
The
apostle Paul summed up the concept of faith in his letter to the Romans:
Therefore we conclude that a man is
justified by faith apart from the deeds of the law (Romans 3:28).
Luther
famously added the word "alone" to this statement, and "by
faith alone" (Latin: sola fide) became his distinctive rallying
cry or slogan. But all this begs a crucial question: because a believer is made
righteous in God's sight by the work of Jesus Christ, does that relieve the
person from an obligation to keep God's law? Put another way: what is the role
of God's law in the life of a follower of Christ today?
Allowing Scripture to Guide Us
This
question provokes a world of confusion and variant thinking that has divided
religious people for centuries. But it is possible to arrive at a definitive
answer provided we allow ourselves to be guided by what the Bible says and do
not introduce extra-biblical ideas that distort our thinking.
One
vital key to answering this question is to follow the context of Paul's
thinking in Romans 3:28. Just three verses later he provides part of the
answer:
Do we then make void the law through
faith? Certainly not! On the contrary, we establish the law (Romans 3:31).
Whatever
faith does, it does not abolish God's law. On the contrary, the law stands
firm. Paul, despite what many believe, claims he did not abolish God's law by
anything he taught. Jesus Christ claimed the same:
Do not think that I came to destroy the
Law [Pentateuch] or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill [to
fill up or complete] (Matthew 5:17).
It
remains a puzzle that so many people seem to believe that Christ and Paul meant
precisely the opposite of what they clearly taught.
Let's
clarify just how these two concepts of law and faith fit together.
To
be "justified" in biblical parlance is to be made righteous. This is
accomplished by the death of Christ whose sacrifice pays the penalty for the
sins of the person who has faith in that sacrifice. All this, according
to Paul, is accomplished "apart from the deeds of the law".
"Passive" Righteousness
Luther
was passionate about this route to righteousness. He called it "passive
righteousness" because there was nothing he could do to generate it. It
did not come from political or ceremonial actions on behalf of the believer. It
was not generated by the person keeping God's law or from his own good works.
This was in contrast to what Luther called "active righteousness" - a
person's own efforts to keep God's law and perform good works.
The
introduction to the Book of Romans in Luther's German Bible of 1522 discusses
his understanding of faith and its relationship to works. At the time, he had
recently broken from Rome and his opposition to "works" had not
reached the crescendo that it would in the coming years. In a more measured
manner he stated:
Faith cannot help doing good works
constantly. It doesn't stop to ask if good works ought to be done, but before
anyone asks, it already has done them and continues to do them without ceasing.
Anyone who does not do good works in this manner is an unbeliever. … Faith is a
living, bold trust in God's grace, so certain of God's favour
that it would risk death a thousand times trusting in it. Such confidence and
knowledge of God's grace makes you happy, joyful and bold in your relationship
to God and all creatures. The Holy Spirit makes this happen through faith.
Because of it, you freely, willingly and joyfully do good
to everyone, serve everyone, suffer all kinds of things, love and praise the
God who has shown you such grace. Thus, it is just as impossible to separate
faith and works as it is to separate heat and light from fire! (Emphasis
added throughout).
Paul
explained this critical point of theological understanding in his letter to the
Galatians.
But that no one is justified by the law
in the sight of God is evident, for 'the just shall live by faith.' Yet
the law is not of faith, but 'The man who does them shall live by them.'
… You have become estranged from Christ, you who attempt to be justified by
law; you have fallen from grace (Galatians 3:11-12; 5:4).
The Key: Abraham's Faith
In
the Book of Romans Paul appeals to the example of Abraham, the "father of
the faithful", to further explain his understanding. As we shall see,
Abraham's example provides the seminal key to understanding the relationship
between faith (belief) and works. The classic statement of faith is bound up
with something that Abraham did:
… Abraham believed God and it was
accounted to him for righteousness (Romans 4:3, citing Genesis 15:6).
God
had appeared to Abraham in Mesopotamia (Acts 7:1-2) and told him that if he
would leave and go to a new land that God would show him, then God would bless
him and make a great nation from his progeny. Furthermore, through him the
whole of humanity would be blessed, a reference to Jesus Christ (Genesis
12:1-3). Abraham's wife Sarah, however, was barren. Yet as the story unfolds,
God makes it clear that it is through Sarah that His promises are going to be
fulfilled. So it took great faith for Abraham to believe God's promises,
because a definite miracle was needed to bring them about. By the time this
miracle occurred, neither Abraham nor Sarah was able any longer to have
children, so a double miracle was needed.
Although
there was nothing that Abraham could do by his own works to fulfil
God's promises, he still needed to respond in faith to what God was
offering. He could either leave Mesopotamia and
proceed on his journey to the unknown land, or stay. Staying would have been
evidence of lack of faith. Moving forward was evidence of his belief and
trust in God. Because of his obedient response, God made a covenant with him
making firm His promise to give Abraham and his progeny all the land from
"the River of Egypt to the Great River", the Euphrates (Genesis
15:18). This was not a covenant "out of the blue"; it was predicated
on faith and the response of obedience.
Does God Accept Us "Just as We
Are"?
How
does this relate to the life of a follower of Christ? God wants an obedient
response to His invitation (calling) to receive eternal life. The Bible calls
this repentance - a change in the direction of our lives. It precedes
our formal acceptance of Christ's sacrifice at baptism. The idea that God will
accept someone "just as they are" is open to misunderstanding. His
acceptance of the sinner to be made righteous is based upon a person's
willingness to change and submit in obedience to God. God may "accept us
as we are", but with the understanding that we will not "remain as we
are".
A Purpose of the Law: Defining Sin
According
to Paul, this is where the first purpose of God's law comes in. The law defines
sin. The penalty for breaking the law is death forever. When a person becomes
convicted of breaking God's law, it leads to acceptance of Christ's sacrifice
to remove the penalty (see Romans 7:7-12; Galatians 3:23-25).
But
then what? When an individual has been forgiven for breaking the law and the
penalty of sin has been removed, is that the end of it as far as the law is
concerned? To find the answer we need to consider what God's law is all about.
Another Purpose of the Law: A
Pattern for Living
The
law (Hebrew torah or teaching) represents the pattern of living
that God desires all people to incorporate into their lives. The point that so
many misunderstand is that the pattern of living remains the same for the
Church as it was for the nation of Israel. The second purpose of God's
law for believers is that it defines the pattern of living we are to follow.
We
can see this reflected in the life of Abraham. Some 13 years after the covenant
God made with him, which was based on Abraham's faith, we see another aspect of
the Covenant relationship based on Abraham's works. Abraham was commissioned by
God to "walk before me and be blameless" (Genesis 17:1).
Abraham was to circumcise his male offspring as a token of the covenant.
Obedience to God and His revealed pattern of living is what was required. God
later said that Abraham "obeyed My voice and
kept My charge, My commandments, My statutes, and My laws" (Genesis
26:5). This is a remarkable statement of works, long before the law was written
down and codified for the nation of Israel.
This
is further evidence of Abraham's faith, which culminated in the famous account
of the attempted sacrifice of Isaac (Genesis 22). Abraham demonstrated total
obedience to God even though he was apparently required to sacrifice his son
Isaac, the only means through which God could fulfil
His promises. Abraham proved his obedience and Isaac was spared. Now God knew
Abraham's obedience was total, He made His prior promises unconditional.
An
"Epistle of Straw"?
The
apostle James wrote about this experience and drew a startling conclusion that
Luther did not like. Luther famously called James's letter the "epistle
of straw", because it did not discuss the role of Christ and seemed to
contradict Paul and what Luther himself thought he had learned. What did James write
that so alienated Luther? Here is the heart of it:
Was not Abraham our father justified by
works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? Do you see that faith was
working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect? And [so]
the Scripture was fulfilled which says, "Abraham believed God, and it was
accounted to him for righteousness." … You see then that a man is
justified by works, and not by faith only (James 2:21-24).
How
do we make sense of this apparent conundrum? Is James contradicting Paul? Are
we justified by faith or by works? Both Paul and James have appealed to the
same scripture, Genesis 15:6, to support their teachings, although each puts
emphasis on different aspects. Thus it would appear that the answer is both
faith and works have a part to play. God's purpose for those He is
calling to become part of His plan for humanity is to change their pattern of
living, their thinking and their actions. God wants those He calls to take on
His holy and righteous character. In fact, God's commission to the follower of
Christ sounds just like the one to Abraham.
Therefore you shall be perfect [in
character], just as your father in heaven is perfect (Matthew 5:48: compare
with Genesis 17:1).
Justification and Sanctification
So,
what are we to conclude about the relationship between faith and works? The
example of Abraham, and the covenant relationship God
entered into with him, shows that both faith and works go together. We need
faith in Jesus Christ to provide forgiveness of sin so that we can be justified
- made righteous in God's sight. The firstt purpose of the law is to convict us
of sin and so direct us to Christ's sacrifice for the forgiveness of sin. Once this
has been accomplished, God expects the Christian to live according to the
pattern of life defined by God's law. This second purpose of the law is to
define a godly pattern of living - called the way of holiness or sanctification
in the Bible (see Leviticus 11:44 and 1 Peter 1:14-17). Put simply, the law
sends us to Christ to be justified, and Christ sends us back to the law to be
sanctified.
Martin
Luther spent most of his time, especially after his break with Rome, terrified
at the notion of God's judgment for sin. He correctly saw that a person could
be made righteous before God through faith in the sacrifice of Jesus Christ -
something not possible through any human effort. But the purpose of all this
was to take on God's righteousness as defined by God's law. Indeed, the
follower of Christ is empowered by God to live by His law, which is
internalized in the heart by God's Spirit - the very essence of the New
Covenant promise (see Jeremiah 31:31-34). This was a point that Luther did not
fully understand. Doctrinal errors that had crept into the Roman church in the
centuries following Christ and the original apostles went unchallenged by
Luther. His efforts at reform never went back far enough to recapture or
restore the true apostolic expression of faith.
Living
Faith or Dead Faith?
As
the apostle James points out, there is living faith and there is dead faith.
Faith accompanied by appropriate works is living faith. But faith without works
is dead and leads nowhere (James 2:14-26). So faith alone is fine for
justification. But that is only half the story. Verbal faith is insufficient
and mental faith is not enough. We must become doers of faith. Living faith
will lead to action, to obedience, to works defined by God's law. True
faith will manifest itself in works of faith in harmony with God's law.
It
becomes a problem when we think of faith (belief) as an intellectual thing -
mental acquiescence or agreement with an idea or fact. But the Greek word for
"belief", pisteuo, is an action
word that means absolute trust and personal reliance on God and Jesus Christ.
Such faith will result in a radically transformed life, living in harmony with
God's law, the expression of His perfect character. The contrast between mere
mental agreement and this action-based faith is powerfully illustrated by the
apostle James when he noted that the demons also believe but tremble because
their kind of belief does not result in obedience to God (James 2:19).
In Summary
1.
Is a follower of Christ justified by faith? Absolutely! This is a
biblical statement. But this faith will lead to obedience to God's law and a
transformed character and way of life.
2.
Are we justified by faith alone? Strictly speaking, this is an
unbiblical statement - it appears nowhere in Scripture. If this implies merely
mental acquiescence, or belief in an idea or promise without appropriate
actions, then this, according to the Bible, is a dead faith.
3.
Is a follower of Christ justified by works? Surprisingly, the answer is yes!
This is a genuine biblical statement. But not in the sense that such works earn
anything. True faith will manifest appropriate works of obedience, without
which faith is dead. James 2:17
This
is the experience of Abraham, whose life of faith-inspired works serves as an
example to us all.
So
what does this mean for us? Being a true follower does not rest on a dramatic
emotional experience, even though repentance and conversion
do involve emotion. Being a disciple of Christ involves a sustained
commitment to God and a permanent change of lifestyle in harmony with God's
revealed pattern of living.
The
Bible teaches that when Christ's followers are granted the gift of eternal
life, they will be rewarded according to their works (Matthew 16:27). Having
been made righteous in God's eyes by faith in Jesus Christ apart from works,
this living faith will manifest itself in works according to the pattern of
living defined by God's law.
Paul: Founder or Follower?
A
famous German theological historian in the 19th century, a man called Adolph Harnack, encapsulates this argument for Paul as the one who
overturned Jewish Christianity when he wrote:
"It was Paul who delivered the
Christian religion from Judaism."
But
is that what happened? There are several arguments that support the view that
Paul was not the founder of Christianity, but was, in fact, a true follower of
Christ. That's what I would like to discuss this afternoon, and to demonstrate
that he indeed followed Jesus in many ways.
There
are many echoes in what Paul says. We find the things that Jesus said echoed in
what Paul says. I want to concentrate on three areas today.
One
scholar, David Wenham, a man I tried to interview a couple of years ago, had
written a book about this very subject in 1995. He is an Oxford University
Professor. He is an Anglican minister, and he does a very careful literary
analysis of writings about Jesus, comments about Him, comments that Christ
taught. He analyses those things and shows how Paul completely aligns with
Jesus.
There
are some scholars who see that that is the fact. One reviewer of the book says
that it's a very important book because it shows:
"... that the
wedge often driven between Jesus and Paul is a figment of scholarly
imagination."
Wenham
concludes his book this way:
"... Paul would have been
horrified at the suggestion that he was the founder of Christianity ... Paul
saw himself as the slave of Jesus Christ, not the founder of Christianity. He
was right to see himself that way.
"The importance of this conclusion, if it is broadly correct, is great. It
has implications for our understanding of the gospel traditions, for our
understanding of early Christianity, and for our understanding of Paul.
"If the primary text that Paul is expounding in his writings, is the text
of Jesus, then, instead of reading Paul's letters in isolation from the
Gospels, it will be important to read them in light of the Gospels ..."
You
and I do that, I hope! We see the whole thing as a unity. What are the
implications of Wenham's conclusion for those who would follow Jesus Christ
today?
If
he is right, if Paul indeed was a follower of Jesus, then what difference does
that make for people who want to follow Christ today, when they read Paul, who
some people think contradicts Jesus? This idea overturns everything and forces
people back to doing what you and I have learned to do, if they really follow
the logical conclusion of this to its end.
The
first thing we learn from what Wenham says, is that
the gospels are a guide to Paul's practice. If we are to read Paul's epistles
in the light of the gospels, then the gospels are what illuminate Paul's
practice. They tell us what he did. That shouldn't be a surprise to us if Paul
was a follower, not a founder. We should expect him to be saying and doing the
things that Jesus did. Paul followed Jesus in observing and teaching both the
Sabbath and on the Sabbath.
Luke
even uses the same phrase to describe Jesus and Paul's practice on the Sabbath:
Acts
17:1 Now when they had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where there was a
synagogue of the Jews.
2 Then Paul, as his custom was ...
This
is the phrase that appears also in Luke's gospel as we will see in a moment.
2
... went in to them, and for three Sabbaths reasoned with them from the
Scriptures,
3 explaining and demonstrating that the Christ had to suffer and rise again
from the dead, and saying, "This Jesus whom I preach to you is the
Christ."
Luke
records Christ going to the synagogue in Nazareth.
Luke
4:16 So He came to Nazareth, where He had been brought up. And as His custom
was (exactly
the same phrase used in connection with Jesus), He went into the synagogue
on the Sabbath day, and stood up to read.
The
word for "custom" in Greek means: "as usual," or "as
was his habit." So Paul was following Jesus in doing this. He also
followed Jesus in not just keeping the weekly Sabbath, teaching on it, and
teaching others to keep it, he also followed Him in keeping the annual Holy
Days. The evidence for this is a bit more sketchy in
one sense, but often the New Testament does not say things that don't need to
be said. Because of the way people had already learned, he didn't need to tell
them everything.
So
we don't find, "Thou shalt keep the following
Holy Days ..." in the New Testament. You find examples of people DOING
it and dating various journeys or times of the year by Holy Days. That makes no
sense unless you are keeping them. Mostly people don't do that. You don't say:
"After the fast, I did this ..." if the fast doesn't mean anything to
you.
So
these Holy Days are mentioned in connection with Paul and with Jesus. We also
know that Paul also taught Gentiles by word and example to keep to the Word of
God as revealed in the Old Testament. The only differences between Old
Testament and New Testament teaching were the result of Christ's coming and of
His sacrifice.
Because
Jesus revealed the Father and explained His own role in respect of the working
out of the Father's plan, certain practices did change. Certain things change
because Christ comes but they don't overturn everything in the Old Testament.
They are a continuity. They may modify, but they are
based in the Old Testament.
But
they do change in the sense of their purpose being fulfilled. One example is the
Old Testament observance of the Passover. Very clearly, on the evening before
His death, Jesus changed the symbols of the Passover meal from roasted lamb,
unleavened bread and bitter herbs, to simply eating bread and wine on an annual
basis.
As
the Lamb of God's sacrifice for sin, Jesus had removed the need for the
Passover meal in the Old Testament form. His followers would now take some
bread and wine annually - at the time, however, of the Passover - to remember
His sacrifice.
But
it doesn't mean that there was an overthrow of the religion that God had given
to the children of Israel, and in its place, the establishing of Christianity.
It doesn't meant that. This is hard for us to get our
minds around sometimes. Because we think of Christianity
being very different from Judaism. In many ways it is, but in many ways
it is a continuity and it is important to understand
that.
Paul
nowhere speaks of "Christianity." That seems a bit odd. Nowhere does
he mention the word. He doesn't mention the word "Christian." He
never says he is a Christian. There are only 3 references to the word
"Christian" in the Bible but they are all inconclusive as to whether
the church knew ITSELF
by that name. Each of those references is inconclusive.
Two
are in the book of Acts. Luke mentions that the disciples were first called
Christians in Antioch. It doesn't say who called them Christians first in
Antioch. It just says that's what happened. It doesn't say they called
themselves that.
The
next one is when Paul is speaking with Agrippa and the king says to Paul:
"You almost persuade me to become a Christian." But that doesn't
prove that that's what Paul thought he was, either. Agrippa says: "That's
what you sound like to me."
Thirdly,
Peter says: "If anyone suffers as a Christian, let him not be
ashamed." But that doesn't say that they call themselves
"Christian" either.
What
Paul does speak of is "THE WAY." He speaks of "the
church." He speaks of "churches of God." He speaks of "the
body of Christ." But the difference in his teaching between old and new
was all related to the coming of the Messiah, promised in the Scriptures.
We
just saw that Paul introduced Christ to synagogue audiences via Old Testament
Scriptures that speak of Him. When he went to Thessalonica he said: "This
is what the scriptures teach about the coming of a Messiah and I am here to
tell you who He is." He goes back to the Old Testament as the basis for
what he teaches.
One
of the arguments that has been put forward by scholars
is that Paul did teach the law to Jewish Christians, but that he didn't require
it of Gentile Christians!
I
have learned that this argument has been put forward down the road in Pasadena
in recent weeks. This is in some way a justification of moving to Sunday as the
day of worship. It's an OLD ARGUMENT! There's nothing new about it.
But
think about it for a moment. Does that mean that Paul was giving "split
sermons?" Paul would have to be schizophrenic to stand up in front of an audience,
some of whom were Jewish, and some of whom were Gentile and say: "I am
going to talk to all of you Jews over here about keeping the law, but all of
you Gentiles over there don't need to listen to me. I'll come and talk to you
afterwards, and then you Jews don't need to listen to that. That's what would
have to happen in reality if that concept is true!
The
much more sensible explanation is that he taught all people the same thing. In
fact, the New Testament demonstrates that, and it points up the foolishness of
the scholars at times.
I
came across a quote from George Orwell, author of the book "1984." He
said to someone:
"You must be a real intellectual
to believe that. No ordinary person could be so foolish!"
Paul
did not make a distinction between Jews and Gentiles once they were in the
church.
Galatians
3:28 There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is
neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
He
also showed that in the WORLD
there are Jews and Gentiles, but there is just one category of CONVERTED people.
1
Corinthians 10:32 Give no offense, either to the Jews or to the Greeks or to
the church of God,
...
referring to three separate categories of people:
Jews, Greeks and the Church of God.
One
book I read recently said that Paul spoke only of two kinds of people: Jews and
Gentiles. But here he clearly speaks of three kinds of people, and he doesn't
separate the Church of God into Jews and Gentiles. That is a very interesting
Scripture.
Did
Paul consider himself different to his ancestors in respect to the God he
worshipped? How did he describe the continuity between old and new?
Hebrews
1:1 God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the
fathers by the prophets, 2 has in these last days spoken to us by His Son ...
Here
is the continuity between the fathers and prophets in the past, and then
speaking to us through His Son.
It
is generally believed that Paul is the author of Hebrews. So he goes from the Old
Testament, through Christ and says this is where the message comes from. He
doesn't say: "By the way, I have all kinds of changes to make." He
says that's the way the message has come down!
2
... whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the
worlds;
Paul
also plainly says that he himself followed the forefathers.
Acts 24:14 "But this I confess
to you, that according to the Way which they call a sect, so I worship the God
of my fathers, believing all things which are written in the Law and in the
Prophets.
It's
a very clear statement about his connection with his past. As Wenham says, we
should read Paul in light of the gospels, and when we do, we have a much better
understanding of the continuity between Christ and Paul, and between the Old
Testament and the New Testament.
Notice
Christ's words in the Sermon on the Mount, where Christ mentions the things
that are written in the law and in the prophets.
Matthew 5:17 "Do not think that
I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to
fulfill.
Paul
certainly saw Christ as fulfilling the law and the prophets.
Acts
26:22 "Therefore, having obtained help from God, to this day I stand,
witnessing both to small and great, saying no other things than those which the
prophets and Moses said would come – 23 "that the Christ would suffer,
that He would be the first to rise from the dead, and would proclaim light to
the Jewish people and to the Gentiles."
According
to John Stott, the British theologian, the attitude of Jesus to the Old
Testament was not one of destruction and discontinuity, but rather of a
constructive organic continuity. He summed up His position in the single word -
not ABOLITION, but FULFILMENT. Stott continues:
"The apostle Paul taught very clearly
the same truth."
What
Jesus meant by fulfilment was not just the
predictive part of the Old Testament, saying that the Messiah would come. That
is clear from the rest of the Sermon on the Mount, where He shows that the law
is still in force, or continues to have authority over us, and is to be kept
according to its deepest meaning at the personal level.
Jesus
intended that we have an example in His life of how the law can be kept in the
spirit, by the Spirit of God at work in us.
Stott
also says:
"We must not imagine, as some do
today, that when we have the Spirit we can dispense with the law. For what the
Spirit does in our hearts is to precisely write God's law there."
Matthew
5:18 "For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one jot
or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till
all is fulfilled.
19 "Whoever therefore breaks one of the least of these commandments, and
teaches men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven ...
It
doesn't say they will BE
there. It just says they will be called least there.
19
... but whoever does and teaches them , he shall be
called great in the kingdom of heaven.
But
He goes further and says something that would have resonated with Paul's own
experience as a Pharisee, when He says:
20
"For I say to you, that unless your righteousness exceeds the
righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, you will by no means enter the
kingdom of heaven.
Paul
describes himself in his preconversion life as a
Pharisee; the son of a Pharisee.
Acts
23:6 ... I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee ...
He
also says that he is ...
Philippians
3:5 ... of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of the
Hebrews; concerning the law, a Pharisee;
Paul
also knew the different in his status and understanding that the coming of
Christ had made. He says that everything that he stood for in the past, he now
doesn't count worth anything.
Philippians
3:7 But what things were gain to me, these I have counted loss for Christ.8 Yet
indeed I also count all things loss for the excellence of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and
count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ 9 and be found in Him, not having
my own righteousness, which is from the law, but that which is through faith in
Christ, the righteousness which is from God by faith;
Talking
about what Christ said in Matthew 5, John Stott says:
"We have no liberty to try to
lower the law's standards and make it easier to obey. That is the casuistry
[the wrong arguing] of Pharisees, not
Christians. Christian righteousness must exceed Pharisaic righteousness. Yet
the advocates of the new morality, or situational ethic, are in principle
trying to do exactly what the Pharisees were doing ...
The
people who call you and me a Pharisee are, in fact, doing what the Pharisees
were doing in the time of Christ! It's very interesting! That's what John Stott
says. Continuing ...
"True, they claim to take Christ's
part against the Pharisees, but they resemble the Pharisees in their dislike of
the law. They regard the law as rigid and authoritarian. And, just like the
Pharisees, they attempt to relax its authority, to loosen its hold.
"In the strongest possible terms, Jesus asserted the law's authority as God's
word written, and called His disciples to accept its deeply exacting
interpretation."
Aside
from the practice of God's law in the weekly and the annual Sabbaths, are there
other obvious connections between the gospels and Paul's teaching?
I
would like to look at three different ways that we can see a
continuity, a parallel between Christ and Paul.
God
as Father
Let's
consider the concept of God as father. The word for "father" in
Hebrew is Ćab, or Ab,
as in Abraham. The word Abba in Aramaic was the term used by children of
their father. It's a friendly, familiar term for father. The word
appears three times in the New Testament:
Mark
14:36 And He said, "Abba, Father, all things are possible for You. Take this cup away from Me;
nevertheless, not what I will, but what You will."
That
is one example where Christ calls the Father Abba. Another is in ...
Galatians
4: 6 And because you are sons, God has sent forth the
Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying out, "Abba, Father!"
The
3rd one is in ...
Romans
8:15 For you did not receive the spirit of bondage
again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out,
"Abba, Father."
You
will notice that in the two examples from Paul's writings, that the verb to
cry out, is used. It isn't used in Mark, but
Hebrews uses the same verb in describing what happened in Gethsemane:
Hebrews
5: 7 who, in the days of His flesh (talking
about Jesus), when He had offered up prayers and supplications, with
vehement cries and tears to Him who was able to save Him from death, and was
heard because of His godly fear,
The
account of Christ agonising in the Garden of
Gethsemane is framed in the same way. It talks about Him crying out. It talks
about Him in tears, in great difficulty, struggling, and crying out: Abba!
When
Paul writes about his spiritual battle with his own nature in Romans 7 and 8,
he uses the language of anguish. He uses the Abba cry; the reference to
Christ's death and resurrection, the opposition of spirit and flesh, and the
need for prayer in weakness. They are all very similar.
During
His ministry, Jesus also said that He had come to REVEAL
the Father. His term for the Father signalled a new
revelation. He taught His disciples to pray to the Father.
Luke
11:2 So He said to them, "When you pray, say: Our Father in heaven, Hallowed be Your
name. Your kingdom come. Your will be done On earth as it is in heaven.
According
to Strong's Lexicon, the Greek word for father here (pater) describes those who, through Christ, have been
exalted to an especially close and intimate relationship with God, and who no
longer dread Him as a stern judge of sinners, but revere Him as their
reconciled and loving Father. It's an interesting combination and a connection
with the same concept that lies behind Abba. Even
though we don't pray: "Our Abba," the concept behind it is the same.
It's an intimate relationship, with a loving and reconciled Father.
The
Return of Jesus Christ
Are
there other indications in the gospels and Paul's writings that exhibit strong
similarities?
Jesus
was very clear about His intended return. When the disciples asked about it, He
responded to their questions with the Olivet prophecy. In Matthew 24 and 25
Jesus speaks about His return on the clouds, as the book of Daniel says in
chapter 7. This was the understanding of the church from the time of Christ. It
was confirmed by angels as the disciples watched Christ ascend into the clouds,
just before the first New Testament Day of Pentecost.
That
Paul had the same understanding becomes very clear in some of his earliest
writings.
1
Thessalonians 1:10 and to wait for His Son from heaven, whom He raised from the
dead, even Jesus who delivers us from the wrath to come.
1 Thessalonians 2:19 For what is our hope, or joy, or
crown of rejoicing? Is it not even you in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ
at His coming?
1 Thessalonians 3:13 so that He may establish your hearts blameless in holiness
before our God and Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His
saints.
1
Thessalonians 4:16 For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout,
with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. And the dead in
Christ will rise first.
This
parallels ...
Matthew
24:31 And He will send His angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they
will gather together His elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to
the other.
This
was the teaching of Jesus that He had been given. Paul may well have just had a
verbal account of it. He may not have had a written account of it, but he knew
what the concepts were and he repeats the same language.
That
this was teaching that Jesus had given and Paul was following, is indicated by ...
1
Thessalonians 4:15 For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we
who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord will by no means precede
those who are asleep.
There's
a final mention of Christ's return in chapter five:
1
Thessalonians 5:23 Now may the God of peace Himself sanctify you completely;
and may your whole spirit, soul, and body be preserved blameless at the coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Earlier
in 1st Thessalonians 5, Paul alludes to one of Jesus teaching in Matthew 24.
1
Thessalonians 5:2 For you yourselves know perfectly
that the day of the Lord so comes as a thief in the night.
Matthew
24: 43 "But know this, that if the master of the
house had known what hour the thief would come, he would have watched and not
allowed his house to be broken into.
A
further indication of parallel teaching is in ...
1
Thessalonians 5:5 You are all sons of light and sons
of the day. We are not of the night nor of darkness.
6
Therefore let us not sleep, as others do, but let us watch and be sober.
7
For those who sleep, sleep at night, and those who get
drunk are drunk at night.
This
is very much like the passage preceding the thief passage in Luke 12 where
Jesus tells His disciples that wakefulness, or personal vigilance and
readiness, is necessary:
Luke 12:36 "and you yourselves
be like men who wait for their master, when he will return from the wedding,
that when he comes and knocks they may open to him immediately.
37
"Blessed are those servants whom the master, when he comes, will find
watching. Assuredly, I say to you that he will gird himself and have them sit down to eat, and will come and serve them.
38 "And if he should come in the second watch, or come in the third watch,
and find them so, blessed are those servants.
Some
of the verbs used here and in the equivalent passage in Mark 13,
are the very same ones that Paul uses in 1st Thessalonians 5:6, and they are
not often used elsewhere by Paul. He just doesn't use these words very often,
but here, the two things are tied together very well.
In
Matthew 25, we have the parable of the wise and foolish virgins. The phrase
that is used in verse 6, going out to meet Him, is the same used by Paul
in 1st Thessalonians 5:17 where he speaks of being caught up to meet the
Lord in the air. It's an unusual Greek verb appearing only a couple of times
elsewhere in the New Testament. So again, an indication of
parallel teaching.
Was Paul a follower of Jesus? Or the founder of Christianity?
Marriage
and divorce
When
it comes to other issues, such as marriage and divorce, we find Paul echoing
Jesus again. The next section of Scripture is very interesting. Perhaps we can
learn something, or clarify our own understanding on the subject.
1
Corinthians 7:10 Now to the married I command, yet not
I but the Lord: A wife is not to depart from her husband.
This
matches Jesus' own words in effect, that marriage is for life.
The
Pharisees came to Jesus, planning to test Him ...
Matthew
19:1 Now it came to pass, when Jesus had finished these sayings, that He
departed from Galilee and came to the region of Judea beyond the Jordan (a place called Perea
on ancient maps). 2 And great multitudes followed Him, and He healed them
there.
This
is the same area where John the Baptist was baptising
- beyond the Jordan, a place called Bethabara. It may
be the place that we did a little bit of filming in "Cheating God Out Of Christianity".
3
The Pharisees also came to Him, testing Him, and saying to Him, "Is it
lawful for a man to divorce his wife for just any reason?"
4 And He answered and said to them, "Have you not read that He who made
them at the beginning 'made them male and female,'
5 "and said, 'For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and
be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh'?
6 "So then, they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has
joined together, let not man separate."
That's
the essence of Jesus' teaching. Here, Jesus confirms God's original intention.
The demand was quite strict. Marriage was to be for life. The marriage
agreement, one to another, is only annulled by death. That's why God later says
that He says divorce, and speaks of it in terms of a violent act (Malachi
2:16).
When
Paul speaks of divorce, he confirms Jesus' answer to the Pharisees. What was
the context in which the question was asked? First, the Pharisees were putting
Jesus to the test. They were trying to trip Him up in the territory of Herod
Antipas who ruled Galilee and Perea.
Jesus
cousin, John the Baptist, had been beheaded for his public opposition to
Herod's marriage to his brother's wife, Herodias. Perhaps they wanted to see
the same thing happened to Jesus.
The
Pharisees were also divided among themselves about the grounds for divorce,
according to the two main schools of Pharisaic thought: Hillel and Shammai.
The
Bible Knowledge Commentary says:
"Followers of Hillel felt a man
could divorce his wife for almost any reason. But others, following Shammai, thought one could not divorce his wife unless she were guilty of sexual offence.
Without
getting involved in the Hillel / Shammai controversy,
Jesus reminded the religious leaders of God's original purpose in establishing
the marriage bond. When the Pharisees then asked about Moses and the
certificate of divorce, Jesus explained the reason for it:
Matthew
19:7 They said to Him, "Why then did Moses command to give a certificate
of divorce, and to put her away?"
8 He said to them, "Moses, because of the hardness of your hearts,
permitted you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it was not so.
9 "And I say to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual
immorality, and marries another, commits adultery; and whoever marries her who
is divorced commits adultery."
10
His disciples said to Him, "If such is the case of the man with his wife,
it is better not to marry."
"That's
too difficult," they said.
Here
Jesus confirms the strictness of God's view of marriage. It is for life. The
disciples realise that Jesus is very strict on the
matter and conclude that if there is no way out, except for marital infidelity,
that it's better not to be married. It's better to remain single. Jesus replies
that not everyone can remain single. He goes into a discussion of celibacy.
Jesus said the only reason for Moses giving permission for divorce, beyond the
exception for infidelity, was for the hardness of their hearts. It wasn't that
God preferred it or desired it. But He did allow divorce for certain human
reasons - hardness of heart. That can cover all kinds of things.
The
woman whose husband had divorced her was allowed to remarry - but not to return
to the first husband if the second marriage didn't work out either. We find
that in Deuteronomy 24.
Similarly,
in 1st Corinthians 7, Paul carries the teaching of Jesus further, to take into
account unusual situations that Jesus didn't address at the time of His
ministry. It doesn't mean that divorce is what God prefers. In fact, as you
read through 1st Corinthians 7, Paul keeps coming back to the fact that people
should stay where they are. They should keep the marriage covenant. They
shouldn't try to get out of it. He is quite insistent about it, several times
over.
So
the principle in 1 Corinthians 7, over and over again, is: live as you are
called. It addresses the single. It addresses converted / unconverted
marriages. It addresses converted / unconverted unions.
In
respect of marriage, Paul is upholding Christ's teaching. However, there are
times when people simply do not wish to be together as husband and wife. What
is the church to do in these situations? Jesus did not say that it was
impossible to divorce. He gave an exception clause. Even then, it doesn't mean
that everyone should take that option.
Repentance,
forgiveness and reconciliation are always possible. But Jesus did mention the
exception:
Matthew
5:32 "But I say to you that whoever divorces his wife for any reason
except sexual immorality causes her to commit adultery; and whoever marries a
woman who is divorced commits adultery.
Paul
addresses these matters in the same manner. He tells when he is repeating
Jesus' instructions and when he isn't:
1
Corinthians 7:10 Now to the married I command, yet not I but the Lord ...
Here's
another of those overlapping sections between Jesus' teaching and Paul's
teaching.
10
... A wife is not to depart from her husband.
That's
what Christ said.
11
But even if she does depart, let her remain unmarried
or be reconciled to her husband. And a husband is not to divorce his
wife.
Here
he frames the response by saying, "This is what Jesus said," showing
consistency and knowledge of Jesus' teaching. He is addressing a converted /
converted marriage.
The
Greek word for depart, (chorizo) is also
commonly used for divorce. If the wife departs or separates herself, she is not
to remarry, and is still to try for reconciliation.
The
converted husband is not to divorce (a different verb: aphiemi)
his wife.
Next
he tells us he has more to say to the rest, to another category of people.
Here's a category that Jesus didn't address. Paul says:
12
But to the rest I, not the Lord, say ...
So
here's some teaching that's not from the Lord. Does that mean it is bad? Let's
read on ...
12
... If any brother has a wife who does not believe, and she is willing to live
with him, let him not divorce her.
It's
the same principle. Don't divorce her. This is similar to the statement he makes
later where he answers a question about the unmarried and what they should do
at a time in history that he calls "the present distress."
25
Now concerning virgins: I have no commandment from the Lord; yet I give
judgment as one whom the Lord in His mercy has made trustworthy.
26 I suppose therefore that this is good because of the present distress - that it is good for a man to remain as he is:
...
not to be married. Does it mean that this is just his
opinion, of no value or application unless we want it to be? Is this an example
of Paul departing from Jesus' teaching, or is he addressing
issues that the church was faced with, due to changed circumstances?
The
church had come into being. People were in the church with converted and
unconverted mates. That raised a whole new set of circumstances. He continues
to say: "Remain as you are. Don't get divorced. Be reconciled." But
he also makes allowances depending on the circumstances.
Paul
also says that his judgments on these matters are valid. He says, "I have
become trustworthy about this matter."
25
... I give judgment as one whom the Lord in His mercy has made trustworthy.
Going
back to the new material he gives ...
1
Corinthians 7: 12 But to the rest I, not the Lord, say: If any brother has a
wife who does not believe, and she is willing to live with him, let him not
divorce her.13 And a woman who has a husband who does not believe, if he is
willing to live with her, let her not divorce him.
14 For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife (the converted wife), and the
unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband (the converted husband);
otherwise your children would be unclean, but now they are holy.
15 But if the unbeliever departs ...
Here's
the new condition ...
15
... let him depart; a brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases.
But God has called us to peace. 16 For how do you
know, O wife, whether you will save your husband? Or how do you know, O
husband, whether you will save your wife?17 But as God
has distributed to each one, as the Lord has called each one, so let him walk.
And so I ordain in all the churches.
This
is something that Paul said is for all the churches. It's a decision that he
made. But within this passage is a statement that says a brother or sister is
not under bondage in such cases. There's an allowance given here where divorce
and remarriage is possible. How is that? It rests on the words: "not under
bondage."
The
word bondage is from the verb douloo.
From this word we get the word slave (doulos).
It means to be enslaved, to be subservient, to be
under obligation. It refers to such cases where the unconverted has departed.
That departure can take place in many different ways. It doesn't necessarily
mean walking out of the door and never coming back. You can depart from your
mate by verbally or physically abusing them continuously.
There
are different ways of departing the marriage arrangement. Generally speaking it
means that one has walked out on the other; has deserted them.
In
such cases where the unconverted have departed, the remaining partners are NOT under
obligation. If you are not under obligation, what are you? You are free. Free
to do what?
Some
would say you are not free to remarry, but if you are free, you are free. It is
not what God prefers. It doesn't say that. These concepts are reiterated in a
slightly different context in ...
39
A wife is bound by law as long as her husband lives; but if her husband dies,
she is at liberty (to
be free) to be married to whom she wishes, only in the Lord.
When
death has separated the married couple, there's no remaining obligation. The
partner in the agreement no longer exists, and the widow or widower is not
bound, and is at liberty - is free to remarry. The Greek verb for bound
here is deo. In verse 27 it's also used
in the context of marriage, in the phrase: dedesai
gynaiki
-
to be married; implying, being under
the authority of.
27
Are you bound to a wife? Do not seek to be loosed. Are you loosed from a wife?
Do not seek a wife.
That's
in the context of the present distress. So Paul makes the same point in verse
15 in concept, if not exactly in the same wording. He's talking about being
bound, and being free. He's talking about being under obligation, and being at
liberty. The same concepts are used in both places, although with slightly
different language.
If
you are not under obligation, and therefore at liberty, or free, then it's not
difficult to figure out what your are free to do.
At
the same time he advises against the practice of divorce if at all possible,
and therefore upholds Jesus' teaching in a new circumstance. He also advises
that it would be better not to marry at the time, but doesn't forbid it either.
He says, "If that's what you need to do, then do it. But you might be
better off not to get married."
So
what can we conclude from this brief overview, from this look at Jesus' and
Paul's teachings, beyond the correspondence we find in teaching weekly and
annual Sabbaths observance, and keeping the law. Did Paul tell people not to
keep the law? Clearly he did not.
We
have looked at three areas where their teachings overlap a great deal:
Sometimes
we, in the church, end up adjudicating marriage situations where we desperately
want people to come back together, but they simply won't do it - and they may
well both be converted, to say nothing of those situations where it's converted
/ unconverted and there are great difficulties.
Even
when Paul teachings something additional as in this last case, he is consistent
with the biblical teaching before him. So was Paul a follower of Jesus, or the
founder of Christianity?
I
have given a few thoughts today to help us understand that he was a follower.
David Wenham concludes his book this way:
"The Old Testament is clearly the
background to Paul's teaching but his focus is on Jesus. Jesus, specifically in
His death and resurrection, is the centre of God's saving plan and the
Christian life is essentially living in relationship to Jesus, living in union
with Him, following His example, obeying His teaching, and looking for the
future that He promised."
So
there are scholars who can see that these two things are very well connected.
Even though in the end they come to the wrong conclusion in terms of what we
should do in our lives, some of these people are quite helpful in helping us
advance the true argument.
That
is what we would like to get into, and discuss in the next television programme, whatever we will call it, something provocative
I suppose. That is maybe what we will begin to work on and began recording
early next spring.
Is Christ Divided?
By Brian W. Orchard
Few would deny that a wise person
derives understanding from the lessons of history. God instructs His people to seek
both wisdom and understanding and to apply them in their daily lives. We are
admonished to consider very carefully the path we walk (Proverbs 4:26).
Various historical events have
impacted the present era of the Church of God, and specific time periods present
us with invaluable lessons as we strive for unity in the Church today.
First, we will examine three
ideologies that have had such an impact and we will seek to develop a more
complete understanding of their origins and implications for us today. They are
ecumenism, congregationalism and evangelicalism. Then we will consider some
remarkable parallels as these movements began to influence the Church of God
through the 19th and into the 20th century.
The Birth of Protestantism
Let's start by looking back at the
birth pangs of Protestantism. The forces that led to the Protestant Reformation
are many and complex, but at the heart were the roles of the pope and the Roman
Catholic Church. When the monk/cleric Martin Luther attached his 95 theses to
the door of the Castle Church of Wittenberg in 1517 (Oberman,
p. 190), it is unlikely that he had any comprehension of the magnitude of the
storm his document would create throughout Europe and, ultimately, the world.
What began as a reasoned appeal to the church over the issue of indulgences (a
discharge from the debt of temporal punishment that the sinner owed) developed
into a major schism.
The common people had long been
abused by papal authority, and they responded vigorously to one of the church's
own taking a stand against corruption and flagrant misconduct (Manchester, p.
143). As time went by, Luther was to discover "that he had become the
voice of millions who suffered doubly from the Renaissance popes; impoverished
by highwaymen like Tetzel [a Dominican monk who sold papal indulgences in
Germany in 1517], they also grieved for their beloved faith, desecrated by
rogues in vestments" (p. 144).
This direct challenge to what was
then the most powerful institution in Europe bred significant philosophical and
religious changes in the thinking of the people. Authority had been
successfully challenged.
One result was that the humanistic
philosophy, which had been quietly developing in the academic world of the
universities, now raised its voice in the public arena. Humanism is defined as
"a doctrine, attitude, or way of life centred on
human interests or values; especially: a philosophy that usually rejects
supernaturalism and stresses an individual's dignity and worth and capacity for
self-realization through reason" (Merriam Webster's Collegiate
Dictionary, Tenth Edition).
The Humanistic Influence
We see the humanistic influence
having its effect in two specific ways; first, by diminishing the authority of
the church and elevating the common man, and second, by challenging the concept
of one true church. And so we come back to Luther.
According
to William Manchester, "In defying the organised
Church, Luther had done something else.
He had broken the dam of medieval discipline. By his reasoning, every man
could be his own priest, a conclusion he himself would reach in
1520-1521... Luther's challenge to ecclesiastical prestige
encouraged a proletariat eager to demand a larger share in an increasingly
prosperous Germany" (p. 143, emphasis added). Thus was born the
movement known as congregationalism, which is defined in the Encyclopaedia Britannica (11th Edition) as
"the name given to that type of church organization in which the autonomy
of the local church, or body of persons wont to assemble in Christian
fellowship, is fundamental" (s.v.
"Congregationalism").
Another familiar concept has its
roots in Luther's revolution. One author writing in U.S.
News and World Report notes that "Martin Luther once described his
ideal church as a 'priesthood of all believers,' where God and the faithful
could commune without the intercession of a priest" (Geier,
p. 76).
Luther's challenge eroded the
concept of one universal church and led eventually to the acceptance of a
multiplicity of denominations. According to The Oxford Illustrated
History of Christianity: "Christians came to terms with the existence
of churches in the plural. The tremendous passions unleashed by the
Reformation were being channelled into an insistence
on individual conversion, a religion of the heart, deep and self-justifying, not
dependent on the structure of routine conformity... More and more,
theologians accepted the idea of 'the invisible church', an intangible reality
above and beyond the fragmented Christian bodies. The eighteenth century was
the 'age of reason', and defenders of a reasonable Christianity thought of a
church in terms of the collective allegiances of its members rather than as
a divinely commissioned continuing organic unity - ...'a voluntary society
of men joining themselves together of their own accord...'" (McManners, pp. 272-273, emphasis added).
Multiplicity Accepted
By the mid-1600s this idea of a
multiplicity of denominations was gaining acceptance. As long as certain
essential doctrines were in place - those deemed necessary for salvation -
other 'lesser matters' could be regarded as optional. This allowed for
diversity in such matters as form of church government and for the development
of interfaith activities. "The Philadelphian Society (founded in 1697...)
was a meeting of Christians of every kind to exchange spiritual experiences,
while the Deutsche Christentumsgesellschaft at Basle
from 1756 onwards was the first international inter-church society, bringing
Christians together in good works and mission enterprises" (McManners, p. 274). The Protestant Reformation thus gave
rise to another important movement - ecumenism.
Ecumenism and Evangelism
It is helpful to examine ecumenism
further, since other approaches have developed from the initial concept. A
dictionary definition of the term ecumenical reads, "of, relating to, or representing the whole of a body of
churches" (Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition).
According to the Dictionary of Bible and Religion, the ecumenical
movement is "the movement toward the goal of greater visible unity and
ecumenical cooperation among all Christian churches... A desire to inwardly
renew all the churches and to learn from the 'younger churches' of the mission
fields, as well as a growing insight into the many beliefs and activities that
already united the various churches, fueled the drive of the ecumenical
spirit" (Gentz, s.v.
"Ecumenical Movement").
Ecumenism has a close cousin -
evangelicalism. As a result of its ongoing antipathy to Roman Catholicism, the
Protestant movement attempted to unify Protestant groups under a common banner.
According to Funk and Wagnalls Standard Dictionary (International Edition,
1960), evangelical is a term denoting "the adherents of a school of
Protestant theology stressing the divine inspiration, authority, and
sufficiency of the Scriptures... and denying in whole or in part the efficacy
of the sacraments and the authority of the church".
In 1846 a group of 900 clergymen and
laymen representing upwards of 50 sections of the Protestant church gathered in
London to form an association known as the Evangelical Alliance. Their stated
mission, as recorded in the 11th edition of the Encyclopaedia
Britannica (s.v. "Evangelical
Alliance"), was "to associate and concentrate the strength of an
enlightened Protestantism against the encroachments of popery..." One of
nine points adopted by the alliance was "the right and duty of private
judgment in the interpretation of the Holy Scriptures" (emphasis
added).
Congregationalism
By definition and example, ecumenism
and evangelicalism are closely related, though they address different aspects
of the movement aimed at Protestant unity.
Congregationalism is also a closely
connected concept. The 15th edition of the Encyclopaedia
Britannica (s.v. "Christianity") describes
it this way, "The basic concepts of Congregationalism are: the
understanding of the congregation as the 'holy people' under the regent Jesus
Christ; the spiritual priesthood... of every believer and the brotherly
exchange of spiritual experiences... between them; the equal rank of all
clergy; [and] the freedom of proclamation of the gospel from every episcopal or official permission.... By virtue of the
freedom of self-determination fundamentally granted every congregation,
no dogmatic or constitutional union... developed in England. North America,
however, became the classic land of Congregationalism as a result of the great
Puritan immigration to New England, beginning with the Pilgrim Fathers on the
'Mayflower' (1620). In the 20th century, acknowledgement of the full
authority of the individual congregation runs through almost all Protestant
denominations in the United States... Congregationalism participates in the
ecumenical movement within which it presses for awakening the independent
activity of the Christian churches in the entire world in terms of a
proto-Christian ideal of the congregation" (emphasis added).
The Dictionary of Bible and Religion adds, "Congregationalists are
defined as Christians who hold that Jesus Christ is the only head of the
church; that the Bible is the all-sufficient rule of faith and practice; that
Christian character is the standard for church membership; and that
sovereignty in church government lies in the local congregation, made up of
God's people..." (Gentz, s.v.
"Ecumenical Movement," emphasis added).
From this historical information, we
can briefly outline a progression.
Those invested with authority to
govern the Roman church "exercised lordship over" the people,
grievously abusing their position.
In reaction to this abuse, a scepticism and distrust of all centralised
church government developed. Thus, over time, the local congregation became the
focus.
Hierarchy was weakened as church
members were considered equal under the concept that "we are all the
priesthood".
An
openness developed toward differing
practices, so long as essential doctrines appeared to be in place.
Parallels in the Church of God
In the light of this progression, it
is interesting to consider the development of the Church of God through the nineteenth
and into the twentieth century. There are some remarkable parallels that reveal
how these concepts that developed within Protestantism have influenced many in
the Church of God. Indeed, as Solomon wisely stated, there is "nothing new
under the sun" (Ecclesiastes 1:9).
During the early 1800s there were a
number of Sabbath-keeping groups scattered throughout the northeastern United
States. According to A.N. Dugger and C.O. Dodd,
various Sabbatarian groups were becoming "cold
and indifferent toward the truth" (p. 287). Into this environment William
Miller, with his enthusiasm for prophecy and the coming of Christ, came as a
breath of fresh air. He proclaimed 1844 as the year Christ would return. When
this did not happen, the stage was set for a reorganisation.
James White emerged as a leader of the Sabbath-keeping Adventists. He focused
primarily on the Sabbath and the second advent of Christ, as the name of his
paper, The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, emphasises.
His leadership relied heavily on the visions and writings of his wife, Ellen G.
White. Together their writings gained in respect and authority until, in the
early 1860s, the Whites forced the issue of organisation
and insisted that the writings of Mrs White be
accepted as equal with Scripture.
A circular letter published in 1864
in The Hope of Israel (a newspaper published by the Michigan Church of
Christ) states in part that Merritt E. Cornell, founder of the Church of Jesus
Christ at Marion, Iowa, "held up, publicly, some other volumes by the side
of the Bible, of a recent date, and averred that these recent publications were
of equal authority, and binding forever with the Bible, and urged us to adopt
their teaching also, as a rule of faith and discipline. A portion of us were
unwilling to accept these new planks in the platform of our Church... The
result was, about one half of the Church decided to receive these volumes as
valid Scripture, and drew off from us, or rather repelled us from them, denouncing
us as rebels, etc., etc., distinctly intimating that they no longer desired nor
would tolerate our company in their religious meetings... We
now discovered that... the real object was to put the visions of Ellen G. White
on the same eminence with the Bible" (Coulter, p. 15).
Contending for the Faith Once
Delivered
The letter was circulated among
several congregations in Iowa as a call to organise a
conference to provide unity in approach in the face of "watering
down" the authority of the Bible. A letter of response from a member at
the time sounds very similar to some letters written by members recently.
"I have received two numbers of
The Hope of Israel, and it seems to us 'meat in due season'. It is very
encouraging to hear that God still has some children who are going to contend
for the 'faith once delivered to the saints'; and not follow the 'cunningly
devised fables' of men... We started with the people called 'Seventh-day
Adventist', on the Bible and the Bible alone; and when they began to introduce
something else, we could not go with them" (Coulter, p. 16).
November 15, 1862, the date of the
general conference conducted at Marion, Iowa, may be the beginning of the
concept of a general conference within the Church of God. By 1884 a movement
had developed to convene a general conference of the Church of God, the name
having been changed from Church of Christ in 1875. The Missouri
Conference expressed a strong desire to see a more unified approach toward the
work the Church had to do. As they put it, "...we see the necessity of a
more thorough work and a greater effort to advance the cause; also... we see
the more necessity of a complete system of order, which could be carried out in
a general conference of the different States..." They further wrote that
"a more thorough organisation was sought and
carried forward. The necessity of system is seen in all that we do, and by
working according to it, it is seen that more work and more good can be
accomplished... Some may not see much in organisation,
and as far as individual standing and worship of God is concerned, it may be
so; but in carrying out the apostolic commission to teach other people and make
believers to preach the gospel into all the world and to take out of the world
a people for the name of the Lord and for His coming kingdom, it is necessary
for that work to be done to the best advantage, and all know this is best done
by a concerted action and by a general oversight of gospel labor"
(Coulter, p. 32).
Strong Leadership, a Common Objective
Apparently this approach toward a
more centralised organisation
met much resistance. The local conferences were reluctant to yield their local
autonomy. Factional infighting and political manoeuvring
continued throughout the late 1800s into the early 1900s. During this time the
work of the Church survived but did not thrive.
In 1906, during this period of
tumult, Andrew N. Dugger began his ministry with the
Church of God. The significance of what follows should not be lost on us.
"During his tenure as president
and editor, Dugger exerted much influence upon the
Church. Throughout the early period of Dugger's
leadership, the Church of God experienced some of its most rapid and greatest
growth. During the period of the 1920s, the church experienced more growth than
it had previously. A missionary spirit was exemplified by the
Church and its leadership" (Coulter, pp. 41-42).
It is evident, then, that while the
General Conference operated as a loosely knit confederation of autonomous groups,
the work of God waxed and waned. When they pulled together with a common
objective to their work, it reached out on an international scale. With strong
leadership and an outgoing focus, the work of God reached into such areas as
Mexico, Central and South America, Western Europe, Africa and the West Indies
(Coulter, p. 42).
Division, Factions Again
Yet, in spite of the evident growth,
by 1927 factionalism again racked the Church.
"Actions like that of the 1927
Conference began to engender contention and strife within the Church. The
leadership was divided over the question of the amount of authority the
Conference should exercise in matters of doctrine and policy. Unfortunately,
the Conference's attempts to solve these problems were not effective. Dissatisfaction
was about to erupt into an explosion that would bring division" (Coulter,
p. 44).
By 1933 discontentment came to a
head, and Dugger issued a pamphlet titled
"Declaration for the Restoration of the Primitive Organisation
of the Church of God". This call for "biblical organisation"
resulted in a combination of boards and committees composed of 12, 7 and 70
members. Herbert W. Armstrong was chosen as one of the 70 elders "to go
forth two by two to give the 'warning message of the hour'" (Coulter, p. 47).
The Conference ended in division, with the Church of God (Seventh Day) dividing
into two separate organisations - the Stanberry,
Missouri, and Salem, Oregon, Conferences.
"The division of the Church of
God (Seventh Day) caused the membership and leadership much grief. Many members
and prospects were discouraged by the frequent attacks one church launched
against the other. In some instances, ministers switched organisations,
bewildering their membership. In other cases, the membership became pawns in the
struggle between ministers who were vying for their loyalty and support. The membership growth of the 1920s was not realised
or even approached in the decades of the 1930s and 1940s" (Coulter, pp.
54-55).
The net result of this fragmentation
was summed up by one author this way: "Since the Seventh Day Adventists organised and changed their name from Church of God, those
who would not go along with the White Party often were entirely against all
forms of organisation... The 'I'll
let no man or organisation tell me what to preach'
syndrome was to ensure a disunited Church of God and precipitate the recurrent
splits which exemplify Church of God history" (Nickels, pp. 363-364).
Out of the Ashes
Out of the ashes of disunity, God
raised up a strong leader to once again focus the people of God on the need to
unify in an organised effort to preach the gospel to
the world. Herbert W. Armstrong well understood the diversifying effect of
ecumenism. His developing understanding of church government (Armstrong, pp. 411-412)
reflected the need to withstand the fragmentation such an approach can cause.
Through his efforts, the work of the Church grew in scope and effectiveness.
Following the death of Mr Armstrong, forces have emerged similar to those that we
have looked at in both the Protestant and Adventist schisms. Positions of
leadership have sometimes been misused to introduce heresy and to
"exercise lordship" over ministers and members. This has resulted in
distrust toward authority. The outward vision of preaching the gospel has been
subjugated to a more congregationalist approach, and
the evangelical concept of a multiplicity of "Churches of God" has
grown to be widely accepted.
Just as the Protestant evangelical
stance sounded reasonable in light of the Roman Catholic Church's abuses, so
the ecumenical approach today can sound reasonable in light of betrayal and
abuse of authority.
Tearing up the Roots Again
As the basic foundational doctrines
were torn up, many have turned to 'outside' sources for help in rebuilding the
foundation. For some this has been an eye-opening experience as they have
studied material they had not previously confronted. In some cases people who
had left, or who had been disfellowshipped, have
gained credibility as the government of the Church has crumbled.
There is, however, one major
difference that should not escape our attention. God's Church is not a
Protestant movement, nor is it just one part of an ecumenical Christianity.
Either it is the New Testament Church of God that Jesus Christ built, or it is
not!
The Fundamental Difference
There is a fundamental difference
between the approach Mr Armstrong took and the
approach of some we see today. Mr Armstrong accepted
the Bible as the source of truth and used 'outside' sources only to support
what had already been revealed from Scripture (Armstrong, pp. 292-309).
However, it would appear that in reaction to the assault on biblical truth of
recent years, some have turned to 'outside' sources to develop the
understanding of a particular point of truth. The difference may be subtle, but
when we see multiple groups, each claiming to represent the Church of God, but
having differing opinions on points of doctrine, we are forced to conclude that
the 'evangelical alliance' mentality is not only alive, but thriving.
One of the great admonitions from
the lessons of history comes to us from the apostle Paul, presented in the form
of a question: "Is Christ divided?"
Is Christ Divided?
What he wrote to the schismatic
congregation in Corinth should make all of us contemplate carefully the path we
have chosen to walk,: "Now I plead with you, brethren, by the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that you all speak the same thing, and that there be no
divisions among you, but that you be perfectly joined together in the same
mind and in the same judgment. For it has been declared to me
concerning you, my brethren, by those of Chloe's household, that there are contentions
among you. Now I say this, that each of you says, 'I am of Paul,' or 'I am
of Apollos,' or 'I am of Cephas,'
or 'I am of Christ.' Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or
were you baptised in the name of Paul?" (1
Corinthians 1:10-13, emphasis added).
The biblical injunction regarding
the unity of the body of Christ is clear. The truth is revealed by God through
His Holy Spirit to those who have humbly repented and surrendered their wills
to Him in obedience. These people are in unity and harmony. What takes place
under the guise of ecumenism, congregationalism or evangelicalism is nothing more
than the continuation of the attack upon the Church to further fragment and
fracture the unity of the body of Christ, thus diffusing the energy of the
Church and reducing the effectiveness of preaching the gospel. These movements
must therefore be resisted by the Church of God if we are to fulfil our mission.
The Lessons of History
The lessons of history are there for
us to learn. Satan's methods may appear under different names at different
times, but his intent remains focused and consistent. His goal is the
fragmentation and dissipation of energies that he knows are vital for the Church
of God to accomplish the work of preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God
in preparation for the return of Jesus Christ. If we are prepared to submit to
God, and to one another, the work of God will go forward in strength to fulfil the great commission Christ gave to His Church.
Let us respond to Paul's urgent
appeal to the Ephesian church to "...walk worthy
of the calling with which you were called, with all lowliness and gentleness,
with longsuffering, bearing with one another in love, endeavouring
to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. There is one body..."
(Ephesians 4:1-4).
References:
Coulter, Robert. 1983. The Story
of the Church of God (Seventh Day). Denver: Bible Advocate Press.
Dugger, A.N., and C.O. Dodd.
1972. A History of the True Religion. 3rd ed.
Jerusalem.
Geier, Thom. 1996. The Case of the Vanishing Priesthood. U.S.
News & World Report, 30 December.
Gentz, William H., ed. 1986. The Dictionary
of Bible and Religion. Nashville: Abingdon Press.
Manchester, William. 1992. A
World Lit Only by Fire. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.
McManners, John, ed. 1990. The Oxford Illustrated History of
Christianity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Nickels,
Richard C. 1977. A History of the Seventh Day Church of God. Vol. 1.
Oberman, Heiko A. 1989. Luther: Man Between God and the Devil. Translated
by Eileen Walliser-Schwarzbart. New Haven:
Yale University Press.
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