The first time I heard anyone
who professed to be a Gospel preacher advocate the new
hermeneutic method was in the exchange between liberal (some
ultra-liberal) and conservative brethren in Nashville in
December, 1988. After the first ultra-liberal speaker had
finished, I met one of the speakers who was going to speak on
the liberal side and asked: Where did you all get that man? His
response was: “Frank, that was rank Modernism.” One of the
speakers said the first century Christians could not have looked
upon apostolic teaching as a pattern because the New Testament
canon was not accepted until the fourth century. Another said we
should study the life of Jesus and do what we feel He would do
in a situation.
I went home and got out my
“Modernism – Trojan Horse in the Church,” written by James D.
Bales in 1971. It amazed me that the “new” part of
“hermeneutics” was basically the same old arguments that James
Bales was answering against Modernists in the church back then.
Certainly, the two positions are not identical, but the end
result – denying the New Testament as an objective pattern for
God’s people is identical. The Modernistic approach ended with
those who advocated it leaving the New Testament pattern and
joining denominationalism, which the New Testament identifies as
a work of the flesh
(Gal.
5:20). It does not take
a prophet to foresee that the same end will come to those today
who are embittered toward the New Testament as a pattern.
I am going to quote
extensively from James Bales’ book, and it will be obvious that
you can change a few words and have the same arguments for and
against the new hermeneutics philosophy. He said: “One liberal
said: ‘We must avoid the proof-text mentality in which
statements of Paul addressed to a specific historical situation,
are erroneously transformed into absolute statements valid for
all times and appropriate for every circumstance…’”
“To this we reply:
First,
if texts do not prove anything for us today, it is futile to
appeal to the Bible at all. If its text is not related to our
times, and valid for our times, the Bible must be abandoned as
God’s revelation to man and as our authority.
Second,
care must be exercised that a passage not be taken out of
context and used to prove something which is not taught by the
passage.
Third,
even when a specific local situation is being dealt with, it is
important for us to accept and to utilize the principle which
Paul applied to a specific situation” (p. 106).
“One of the signs of error and
confusion which can lead into modernism or other types of error,
is the charge of ‘legalism’ when someone insists on teaching
people to do what Jesus commanded
(Matt.
28:20)…These confused
individuals, however, do not abandon law. They firmly believe
and may even fiercely proclaim, ‘Thou shalt not be a legalist.
It is wrong to be a Pharisee!’…One is not being a legalist in
maintaining that we are in some sense under law to Christ. There
are commandments which we are to keep
(Matt.
28:20; Acts 2:42; 1 Cor. 9:21; Heb. 8:10)”
(p.112).
“There is a love of novelty
which pants as it pursues the latest fad in theological circles.
They are like those in Athens who ‘spent their time in nothing
else, but either to tell or to hear some new thing’
(Acts 17:21). They want both to
be different and on the frontier of what they consider to be the
intellectual boundaries of the day. As Reuel Lemmons put it, in
speaking of some being attracted to neo-orthodoxy, ‘It’s popular
because it is something different from the centuries old
fundamentalism; we are suckers for something new and different.
We do not want to ‘parrot the party line.’ We want to know what
it is to be ‘free.’ We want to ‘cast off restraints’ so we
become suckers for neo-orthodoxy’” (p. 141). Does that sound
familiar in the voices, and writings, of new hermeneutics
advocates?
“What is called ‘new’ may be a
new revival of an old error. Although there are new fads and
wrinkles there are, basically speaking, few new errors. Even the
modern errors in modernism are the results, as a general rule,
of applications of old errors” (p. 145). “Many people assume
that there is some sort of inevitable evolutionary process which
is carrying man upward and onward. Therefore, the old is out of
date or false and the new is relevant and true. These people
overlook several facts. First that truth is not tarnished with
the passage of time, and error is not turned into truth just
because is it a new error.
Second, the new errors are
usually not new errors, but new revivals of old errors. They may
be dressed in some different verbiage but their nature has not
been changed” (p. 149).
In the chapter entitled “Are
Liberals the Only Scholars?” he said: “It is true that there is
certainly a need for more scholarship amongst brethren. We must
not put a kind of premium on ignorance. But scholarship is not
to be equated with liberalism. If one cannot be a scholar
without being a liberal, there is no place in the New Testament
church for scholars. On the other hand, there is no place for
the New Testament church itself if modernism is right” (p. 186).
I would say the same is true of the new hermeneutics philosophy.
If the New Testament is not a pattern, there can be no New
Testament church, and history shows that when men give up the
pattern they take up denominationalism and build by their own
patterns.
A former college room-mate of
mine, who later went to Harding College, has been caught up in
the new hermeneutics, and in February of this year, he responded
to a message I sent him with these words: “I can’t believe
you’re still hung up on that ‘pattern’ nonsense! No, there is
nothing wrong with instrumental music in worship (the N.T. is
silent on the subject), observing the Eucharist once a month, or
teaching the doctrine of salvation by faith only – depending on
what one means by faith. And I’m quite sure there are good
Christians who are members of that Baptist Church of Christ.” I
wonder what present advocates of new hermeneutics among brethren
would say to my friend, and why? The fact is, they have no
hermeneutical principle by which they can say anything he
believes is wrong. If so, what are they and how do they apply to
his statements? They have accepted the cultural hermeneutic of
our age which says whatever a person sincerely believes to be
true is truth for him and this makes him free from legalism and
able to fully develop spiritually!
In his conclusion, Bales
talked about people criticizing “the traditional
song-prayer-sermon-invitational service.” He accurately said:
“It should be obvious that it is not just traditional, but is
scriptural to sing, pray, teach, give and observe the Lord’s
supper in the assembly on the Lord’s day…However, we should not
be deceived. When ‘renewalists’ (he named one) speak of breaking
with the past in so far as the ‘worship hour’ is concerned, they
are out to change far more than the ‘worship hour.’ The
influences of society, or some segment of society, rather than
the influence of Scripture constitutes the decisive influence
with this type of ‘renewalist.’” (pg. 226, 227).
When men are more impressed
with the scholarship of the world than with the ancient order of
the New Testament, they endanger their own souls and the souls
of others. The canon of Scripture did not become authoritative
in the fourth century (as advocated in the Nashville meeting in
1988), but what the apostles bound and loosed on earth was what
God had bound and loosed in heaven and constituted a pattern
before it was ever written. People knew the pattern on how to be
saved before the book of Acts was written, and they knew when to
observe the Lord’s supper before Acts 20 was written. God’s word
was a pattern when it was spoken and we have that same message
preserved for us in written form
(1 Pet.
1:23-25). The
principles of Bible interpretation did not begin with Francis
Bacon (as so-called scholars argue), but has always been God’s
way of communicating with men. Jesus used precept, example,
necessary inference and generic and specific authority in
answering the question about divorce in Matthew 19. The apostles
used precept, example and necessary inference in revealing God’s
will on whether Gentiles had to be circumcised in order to be
saved
(Acts 15).
When men lose their respect for what the apostles bound and
loosed, by the direction of the Holy Spirit, they are following
the wisdom of men, not the wisdom of God. It reminds me of a
ship in a swift stream that has lost its rudder and has no
paddle. It may drift safely for a little while because it had
been guided into safe waters, but the end will not be pretty.