Debate,
Discipline, and Disorder
The Moderator of the Free Church
of Scotland is well known as an enthusiastic evangelistic apologist, unafraid
to engage both secularists and theological liberals in debate. His recent debate with a leading liberal in
the Church of Scotland, in which he ably defended the biblical position on the
atonement is an example of his insightful style. Unfortunately, it was also a first-hand
experience of the duplicity of the liberal church establishment, who prevented
others making a recording with the assurance that the Church of Scotland would
make available its own recording, only to find that they had destroyed the
recording to prevent its distribution. (I wonder why they did not wish people,
perhaps their own people, actually hearing what their leading liberal ministers
are teaching.) You can read the full story here:
What I find interesting is the response of
some evangelicals to this debate. One
response in particular caught my attention. It claimed that, though error may
be prevalent in the denomination, it is not yet apostate. Part of his reason for this is that the
church still has the Westminster Confession of Faith.
I must admit that I missed “possession
of the Westminster Confession of Faith” as one of the marks of the true church. These marks are three: the
biblical preaching of the Word of God, the correct administration of the
sacraments, and the exercise of godly discipline.
They are summed up in the
Belgic Confession (Article 29) on the "Marks of the True Church":
“The true church can be
recognized if it has the following marks: The church engages in the pure
preaching of the gospel; it makes use of the pure administration of the
sacraments as Christ instituted them; it practices church discipline for
correcting faults. In short, it governs itself according to the pure Word of
God, rejecting all things contrary to it and holding Jesus Christ as the only
Head. By these marks one can be assured of recognizing the true church-- and no
one ought to be separated from it.”
Where does the WCF fit into these
marks? If a denomination has a
confession of faith, but no-one is required to believe it or preach it, then it
is merely a historical document without force or influence. In evangelical denominations which hold to the
WCF it is required that men clearly state exceptions they may have to the Confession
before they are ordained, and they promise to inform their presbytery if they
change their minds and come to reject aspects of the Confession.
I know that when I trained for
the ministry of the Church of Scotland not one in twenty of my fellow students
had read the WCF, and not one in forty sincerely believed in what it taught. That
did not stop the others affirming their belief in the Confession at their
ordination, hiding behind the statement “with liberty of opinion on such
matters that do not enter into the substance of the faith.” Of course, there was no definition of the
substance of the faith!
So, to say that a denomination
still has the WCF, when it does not enforce the teaching of the Confession is a
meaningless platitude. When a man can teach against the Confession and no
discipline (the third mark of the true church) can be exercised against him, it
proves that the WCF is a dead letter. What Church of Scotland men must
explain is why they think a church that does not enforce the preaching of the
truth, that tolerates and promotes those who refute the Confession and deny the
clear teaching of Scripture on doctrine and ethics, and that no longer has any
enforceable system of discipline can be seen as a true and not apostate church.
On a positive note, we should
explore together with these evangelical men what the Scripture teaches on
apostasy and how the church should deal with heretics. Sadly, that is one debate they do not seem
prepared to have either in writing or in public discussion. I would love to see David Robertson engage in
that debate. I think, perhaps, he would
be somewhat more irenic than those of us who have left the Church of Scotland He would be a good man to build bridges, if our evangelical brothers have any desire to have such bridges built.
No comments:
Post a Comment