While the old Bible hermeneutics
acknowledges that God communicated his will to man through explicit
commands, approved examples and necessary implications, a new
hermeneutics makes light of all three by establishing an imaginary
distinction in scripture between gospel and doctrine.
Essentially, the gospel/doctrine distinction has historically held
that the gospel consists of a very limited set of facts about Jesus
which are preached to the lost and which they can believe to the
saving of their souls. Doctrine, on the other hand, is taught those
already saved by the gospel. It is the product of the epistles,
which is then filtered down to modern men through cultural and
theological biases, creating an individually held standard that must
not be imposed upon those of a conflicting mindset. The gospel is
never preached to the saved and doctrine is never taught the lost
when this distinction is obeyed.
The net result of this distinction, whether intentional or not, is a
broadening of fellowship since the parameters for disagreement are
minimized into obscurity. Leroy Garrett speaks for the New Unity
Movement when he says, "It is the gospel and not doctrine that
determines fellowship" (Garrett 42-46, quoted in Roberts 55).
Fellowship is first renewed for those who teach and practice error
within the churches of Christ. Then it is expanded to include all
those loyal somehow to the "Restoration Movement," including
Christian churches and Disciples of Christ with their instrumental
music, missionary societies and female leadership. Eventually,
fellowship is offered to denominational believers and "brethren in
prospect." The continued digression of this movement is inevitable
as men whittle God's word down to whatever they can minimally agree
upon. The false gospel/doctrine distinction is the tool of ecumenism
and it reverberates whenever men proclaim that the bible is not
understandable and that since we cannot know everything, it is not
even certain that we know anything.
History of the Gospel Doctrine
Distinction
Among brethren, Alexander Campbell pioneered the use of the
gospel/doctrine distinction in his war against what he called the
"yoke of clergy." In battling the clergy system of the nineteenth
century, Campbell argued that gospel and doctrine were mutually
exclusive (Roberts 47).
The gospel/doctrine distinction gained momentum, when in 1936, J.A.
Jungmann, a German Catholic theologian, published his perspective as
The Good News and Our Proclamation of the Faith (Meador). Jungmann
championed the kerygmatic approach to preaching, by drawing a line
of distinction between gospel (kerygma) and doctrine (didache).
Later that same year, a professor in the Church of England named C.H.
Dodd published his similar theories in The Apostolic Preaching and
Its Development (Meador). Not believing in the plenary of the
scriptures, Dodd asserted that the true gospel consisted only of the
teachings of Christ and that the words of Peter, Paul, et al. were
merely a primitive catechism of their own moral instructions based
on his life.
"To Dodd, these original sayings of Jesus (which had salvation as
their theme) were buried in the volume of New Testament writings but
he has determined which they are and these form an original 'kerygma'
or evangel (the original gospel that has salvation as its theme).
One should not try to teach this gospel but kerussein (Proclaim,
preach it). The doctrinal moral instruction (Law, if you will)
should be taught (didaskein), not preached. From this, one can see
clearly the distinction that Dodd has made between gospel and
doctrine." (Roberts 48).
Since World War II, the gospel/doctrine distinction has been
championed most notably by brethren Carl Ketcherside, Leroy Garrett
and Edward Fudge. It is repeated in the digression of Max Lucado and
Rubel Shelley. More recently, its echoes can be heard among brethren
struggling to keep the peace amid controversies over fellowship with
error, creation and divorce and remarriage.
Ketcherside, for instance, has written, "The gospel was proclaimed
as fully and completely on the first Pentecost after the
resurrection of Jesus as it ever has been, and nothing written later
was added to it — Not one apostolic letter is a part of the gospel
... the Roman letter was not a part of the gospel ... the letter to
the Galatians was not a part of the gospel" (Mission Messenger).
Ketcherside has narrowed the gospel down to just seven integral
facts:
What were the constituent factors of the gospel? There were seven of
these as follows: the life, death, burial, resurrection, ascension,
coronation and glorification of Jesus of Nazareth — The "doctrine of
the apostles" consists of a course of instruction designed to bring
citizens of the kingdom to a constantly increasing sense of maturity
and responsibility (Unity in Diversity, www.unity-in-diversity.org).
Garrett, on the other hand identifies just three core gospel
matters: the death, burial and resurrection of Christ (Our Heritage
of Unity and Fellowship, www.freedomsring.org). Fellow traveler
Rubel Shelly also identifies three, but they are subtly different.
"In The Second Incarnation, Shelly said that there are but three
things that are core matters -- The Deity of Christ, baptism (for
any reason, such as to obey God; it does not have to be for the
remission of sins), and the Lord's Supper" (Cates). If they cannot
agree on the one subject upon which everyone is supposed to be able
to agree, what will happen to their theory?
The writings of Lee Wilson, Shelly and Edward Fudge show how the
gospel/doctrine distinction facilitates a
unity-in-doctrinal-diversity with few imaginable, objective limits.
Wilson, editor of Grace Centered Magazine, explains his purpose as
offering brethren a reality check about what matters:
There are truths that are not subject to compromise. The first level
core gospel issues (Ephesians 4:5), are simply
non-negotiable. Theories on Premilinialism [sic], apostasy,
miracles, discipleship -- (dancing, drinking, etc) and church
government (name of the church, eldership) are not salvational
issues. My salvation and yours does not depend on having all the
right answers. Jesus Christ is the only one with all the right
answers and that is why we follow Him. The apostles did not agree on
everything-they differed on many things (Acts 15:36, Galatians
2:11). Their unifying element was Jesus Christ, and His gospel.
Gospel is not believing if Jesus will reign for 1000 years on the
earth before taking us to heaven or not. Gospel is not who [sic]
your church decides should serve as an elder or deacon. Gospel is
not a "correct" view of instrumental music in the worship service.
It seems to me that many of us have forgotten what real gospel is.
Fudge replies on his website to doctrinal questions with thoughtful,
if not always scriptural, answers, but then chalks many of them up
to matters of minutia. Concerning Premillennialism, he sums, "The
precise meaning of the 1,000-year reign in Revelation 20 is not at
the core of the gospel, and it is not something about which those
who love and follow Jesus Christ should break fellowship or engage
in combat" (GracEmails: Premillennialism). On baptism, Fudge says,
"Faith and baptism do not belong in a list of like-and-equal things.
They are not of the same "order" and ought not be lined up in a row
as if they were" (GracEmails: Baptism).
The Core Gospel
It becomes apparent then that making a distinction between gospel
and doctrine allows one to emphasize a few core facts about Christ
and to relegate the remainder of the New Testament to uninspired
catechism or debatable theories viewed through a theological prism.
All those espousing the core gospel theory are at odds themselves
over what to include in the core, since the bible fails to make the
distinction for them with its own ink.
The end result, however, is always a broadened fellowship among men
who can agree on a few issues and agree to disagree on most matters.
First, teachers of error among brethren are excused, tolerated and
even embraced in spite of their doctrines. Then, other children of
the "Restoration Movement" are begged to forgive us for fighting
against Premillennialism, instrumental music in worship, female
leadership and the missionary society. Finally, fellowship is
offered to the "pious unimmersed" and "brethren in prospect" among
the denominations (Lemmons).
The unavoidable consequence of the gospel/doctrine distinction is a
Calvinistic understanding of grace and an ecumenical approach to
fellowship. Some of the theorists whittle the important stuff down
to a half-dozen matters, some including baptism and other acts of
obedience to the faith, but others carve deeper and eliminate all
but faith alone. Additionally, it becomes evident that no violation
of any New Testament doctrine will cause one to forfeit his eternal
salvation, thus tending to Calvin's doctrine of the final
perseverance of the saints. Holding one's faith firm to the end now
means only continuing to believe in Jesus, whether or not one
bothers to behave like it.
An undercurrent of this same sentiment, though much diluted, can now
be heard among brethren unwilling to confront the specter of
modernism and liberalism abroad today. Some bible subjects are being
demoted almost as swiftly as brethren develop some disagreement over
them. Truths that were once almost universally held are now
relegated to meaningless matters of indifference, even though God
has forcefully spoken about them. The analysis of God's creation
account in Genesis 1-2 has been subjected to this kind of wrangling
and we are now being told that it does not matter if one believes in
a literal, six consecutive 24 hour day creation or that there are
gaps and ages in there that Moses did not mention.
In the summer of 2000, an open letter was sent to the administration
of Florida College expressing concern at the apparent tolerance
there for teachers and doctrines that indicated that a non-literal
understanding of the Genesis account was both permissible and
perhaps even mandatory. In addition to the administration response,
brother Tom Couchman also replied to the more than five-dozen
signers of the open letter. His response indicates a flirtation with
the gospel/doctrine distinction:
Unless I misunderstand, the sixty-seven "most assuredly" view
disagreement on the interpretation of Genesis as "a reason for
breaking fellowship between brethren." Those addressed in this
letter will make up their own minds, but I cannot see why anyone who
values unity would participate in a discussion initiated for the
express purpose of dividing brethren over an issue which has nothing
to do with obedience to the gospel message, the imitation of Christ
or the ministry of the New Testament church (1)
The apostolic message gives a special position ("first importance")
to the incarnation, death, burial, resurrection, baptismal
submission to and disciplinary imitation of Christ. It gives no such
place to the creation account in Genesis 1-2, the creation
account in Psalm 33 or the creation account in Job 38 (2).
While brother Couchman's core matters are surely broader than most
others referenced here, they exclude certain matters about which the
Bible speaks. He suggests that fellowship is only threatened when
obedience to the gospel message, imitation of Christ or the ministry
of the church is violated. Yet, our Lord did not treat the creation
account as allegory, fairy tale or gap-ridden summary. When he
referenced Genesis 1-2, he noted that God created man and
woman at the beginning (Matthew 19:4). In order to imitate
Christ, a believer must likewise be willing to accept that God
actually created male and female at the beginning, not some millions
of years after the beginning and a time far closer to the present
than the beginning. Maurice Barnett responded to brother Couchman:
[T]he creation account is interwoven, doctrinally, with both Old and
New Testament teaching in some of the very areas brother Couchman
says it has no place! He says that what we believe about creation
has no bearing on our salvation. Well, I do know that what we
believe is important wherever God says that it is and when God says
we are to believe something, then it is important to our salvation.
We could multiply such instances of teachings that are part and
parcel of "the faith," truth, the doctrine according to godliness.
Can we just believe anything we want to about such things as long as
we are particular about the areas brother Couchman says are the
important ones? Each area of truth has its own doctrinal importance,
but all of it is the faith and the truth. The Holy Spirit guided the
apostles into all the truth, John 16:13. On the one hand,
this truth would make man free, John 8:32, and on the other
it gave proper instruction about foods, 1 Timothy 4:3-4.
Refutation of the Gospel/Doctrine
Distinction
Nowhere is the error of the gospel/doctrine distinction more clear
than in Romans 6:17, which reads, "but God be thanked that
though you were slaves of sin, yet you obeyed from the heart that
form of doctrine to which you were delivered." Paul gives credit to
doctrine for emancipating sinners, but surely no one is prepared to
argue that he was ignoring the gospel. God forbid; instead he was
using the two terms interchangeably. Although the two Greek words
are not synonymous, they are used interchangeably in scripture,
denying distinction theorists an important piece of evidence.
Elsewhere, Paul just as sweetly commends those who "obey the gospel"
(Rom. 10:16) and the faith (Rom. 1:5, 16:26). This was
the doctrine of Christ that they had obeyed (2 John 7-11) and
it was the gospel without distinction.
Doctrine and gospel are also used interchangeably in 1 Timothy
1:8-11, where the gospel was the standard by which unsound
doctrine was to be identified. When Levi spoke of the words of
Christ, he referred to them as "the gospel of the kingdom"
(Matthew 4:23) and his astonishing doctrine, or teaching
(7:28).
This lack of distinction becomes very practical immediately in the
history of the church due to the error of the Judaizing teachers.
Among the Pharisees who believed in Christ, many rose up, saying,
"It is necessary to circumcise them [Gentile converts], and to
command them to keep the Law of Moses" (Acts 15:5). When this
trend began to infiltrate the churches of Galatia, Paul wrote to
warn the saints about those who desired to "pervert the gospel of
Christ" (Galatians 1:7). Arnold Hardin wrote, "The Galatians
were falling from grace in that they were allowing themselves to be
carried away from the sacrifice of Christ to that of bondage under
the law" (Roberts 56). While that much is undeniable, it ignores the
prominent means by which this was being accomplished. The error was
not about the death, burial and resurrection of Christ, nor about
his ascension or coronation. The error concerned the necessity of
circumcision to salvation. It was plainly a perversion of the
gospel, in spite of the fact that Jesus said nothing about it during
his public ministry. The gospel, therefore, includes matters that
did not come to the fore until well after the church was
established.
The effect of this error cannot be denied either. Souls were falling
from grace (Galatians 5:4). "Thus, one could teach
'doctrinal' error (circumcision, law keeping) and still be guilty of
perverting the 'gospel.' But how is that possible if the gospel only
consists of three basic facts while all else is doctrine?" (Hafley)
Paul describes contending against this doctrinal error as
maintaining the "truth of the gospel" (Galatians 2:5)
although many believers in Christ were holding to it. Were they
right about the gospel, but wrong about the doctrine? No, when they
were wrong about circumcision, they were wrong about the gospel.
Paul's accusation against Peter for refusing to eat with
uncircumcised brethren solidifies the notion that this doctrine is
part of the gospel and a matter of fellowship. He writes, "But when
I saw that they were not straightforward about the truth of the
gospel..." (Gal. 2:14). "However, if association with the
Gentiles involves 'doctrinal' matters only, and not issues of the
'gospel,' how could his behavior be said to be contrary 'to the
truth of the gospel'? Peter certainly did not deny the 'core'
gospel facts, yet he walked not 'according to the truth of the
gospel'" (Hafley).
Even the old assertion of Campbell and Dodd that the gospel is
preached to the lost and the doctrine is taught the saved is proven
false in the crucible of scripture. Paul informed the church at Rome
that he was "ready to preach the gospel to you who are in Rome also"
(Romans 1:15). In 1 Corinthians 15, he recites the
account of Christ's death, burial and resurrection for the church,
preaching to the converted in the process.
Fellowship was strained on other occasions in the New Testament and
some involved clear-cut matters about the nature and person of
Christ. The Gnostic error described in 1 John and the
accusations against Hymenaeus and Philetus in 2 Timothy 2 all
revolve around the divinity of Christ or his resurrection.
Fellowship, however, was also strained over matters that could not
be connected even remotely to the gospel of this false dichotomy.
In 1 Corinthians 5, the apostle Paul commands a local
congregation to deliver one of its members to Satan for the
destruction of the flesh. They are not to keep company with him or
eat with him anymore. Has he denied the virgin birth or discounted
the resurrection? No, he was guilty of ongoing sexual immorality
with his father's wife. His error fell on the doctrinal side of this
imaginary distinction, but that did not protect him from
correction.
Paul's description of withdrawal in 2 Thessalonians 3 is the
fullest in scripture. There, brethren were required to withdraw from
every brother that walked disorderly. Is "disorderly" synonymous
with some recantation of the core gospel facts about Jesus? No, here
disorderly is living in a way that was "not according to the
tradition which he received from" the apostles (6). Specifically,
some in Thessalonica were lazy and idle, refusing to work and
compelling the brethren to provide for them. Paul failed to make the
gospel/doctrine distinction, one supposes.
Conclusion
Scripture makes no gospel/doctrine distinction, save that the words
are indeed different, though often used interchangeably. This false
dichotomy is nothing more than an ecumenical tool of the devil to
console men to stand a little less firm concerning the will of God.
The result is always a broader fellowship than the narrow and strait
way depicted in the teachings of Christ (Matthew 7:13-14, 21-27,
Luke 6:46). In a limited form it is used to protect associations
with teachers and practitioners of error among the saints. Still, we
have seen it used to extend a hand of fellowship to errorists in the
"Restoration Movement" and even denominationalism.
Until we learn to speak where the bible speaks and remain silent
where it is silent, we will continue to see methods of denying those
in error the correction that may save their souls. All the while, we
will be surrounded by gospel/doctrine distinctionists crying,
"Peace, peace" in the midst of undeniable conflict.
Watchman Magazine – October, 2003
Works Cited
Barnett, Maurice. "Response to Tom Couchman." Watchman Magazine
Online: http://www.watchmanmag.com/0306/030624.htm
Cates, Curtis. "The Core/Bull's Eye Gospel." Carolina Messenger
Couchman, Tom. "A Response to 'The Creation Account & Florida
College'."
Online: http://bibleworld.com/couchman.pdf
Fudge, Edward. "The Millennium." GracEmails
Fudge, Edward. "Faith & Baptism — Important But Different."
GracEmails
Garrett, Leroy. "The Word Abused." Restoration Review, Vol. XVII,
Num. 3.
Garrett, Leroy. "Our Heritage of Unity and Fellowship."
Hafley, Larry. "Perverting The Gospel." The Bible Speaks
Online:http://www.thebiblespeaks.com/Articles/Authority/Obey/perverting.htm
Hardin, Arnold. "Accursed of God." The Persuader, Vol. XI, Num. 5.
Ketcherside, Carl. "Mission Messenger."
Ketcherside, Carl, "Unity in Diversity"
Lemmons, Reuel. "Hidden Poison and Body of Error (2)."
Firm Foundation, Sept. 10, 1963.
Meador, Joseph P. "Are the gospel and the doctrine of Jesus the
same?"
Firm Foundation
Roberts, Tom. "Neo-Calvinism in The Church of Christ."
Fairmount IN: Cogdill Foundation, 1980.
Wilson, Lee. "Statement." Grace Centered Magazine
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