Towards
the conclusion of his second epistle, the apostle John wrote: "Whoever
goes onward, and abides not in the teaching of Christ, does not have
God. . . "
(v. 9).
In recent
years, this passage has become the focus of stormy controversy. The
significance of the passage has been distorted seriously — both by those
on the liberal “left,” and others on the radical “right.”
A small
minority has contended that virtually every disagreement over the
meaning of scripture falls within the scope of
2 John 9
(e.g., the
Bible version one uses, or whether or not a congregation may have a
refrigerator in the church building). A growing, “progressive” segment
alleges that the passage is directed to a first-century heresy that
opposed the teaching that Jesus came to earth “in the flesh.”
Typical of
this latter viewpoint is an essay titled, “2 John 9 And Christian
Fellowship,” that appears in the book, The Peaceable Kingdom (Abilene,
TX: Restoration Perspectives, 1993, pp. 71-92). This volume was authored
by Carroll D. Osburn, a Bible professor at Abilene Christian University.
Osburn
charges that the traditional manner in which some have appealed to this
passage “to eliminate from fellowship anyone with whom one disagrees”
has become a “hermeneutical nightmare.” One might be inclined to agree —
if the “anyone-with-whom-one-disagrees” charge represented a significant
reality. The problem is that Osburn, and those of his “hermeneutic”
mentality, disavow that this passage has any applicability to their
ambitious agenda of extending full fellowship to various sectarian
bodies of “Christendom.”
The
professor makes it clear that, in his judgment, the threshold for
Christian fellowship is merely the conviction “that Christ is the Son of
God” (p. 90). Such matters as observing weekly communion, the use of
instrumental music in worship, the dogma of premillennialism, or, for
that matter, whether baptism is “for,” or “because of,” the remission of
sins, are issues of no serious consequence to him. He would throw wide
open the doors of Christian fellowship to those who subscribe to any of
these notions. And he is a teacher of our youth!
The Text
Let us
consider some elements of
2 John 9.
1. The term
“whoever” means anyone or everyone
(cf. John 3:16; Revelation 22:18).
2. “Goes
onward” (proagon) signifies to “take the lead, to move ahead” (F.W.
Danker, et al., Greek English Lexicon, 2000, p. 864). The present tense
form suggests persistent movement in the wrong direction.
3. “Abides
not” (present tense) reflects the negative side of the digression. To go
forward, is to not remain, within the prescribed boundary.
Then there
is the controversial phrase “the teaching of Christ.” The chief point of
contention involves the meaning of tou Christou, “of Christ.” In the
Greek Testament, the phrase is in the genitive case, which, generally,
is viewed as the case of “possession.” The matter is more complex,
however, in that the genitive is “more elastic” than any other Greek
case, covering a wide range of semantic relationships (Daniel Wallace,
Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics, Zondervan, 1996, pp. 74-75). Wallace
lists no fewer than 33 uses of the genitive in the N.T.
The battle
has raged mostly over whether or not the genitive of
2 John 9
is
“objective” or “subjective.” If it is construed as objective, the phrase
means “the teaching about Christ.” If it is viewed as subjective, the
sense is “Christ’s teaching,” i.e., that which comes from him.
Any serious
student of the Greek New Testament knows that this issue is not so much
a matter of grammar in this case, as it is a matter of exegesis (see A.T.
Robertson, Historical Grammar, Hodder & Stoughton, 1919, p. 499). In
other words, context will be the decisive factor in providing direction
for the interpretation of the phrase.
In the
process of biblical exegesis, the term “context” is employed in two
senses. It has to do with the immediate setting of a passage; it also
relates to the general teaching of the Scriptures related to the
subject.
Osburn
concedes that some very respectable Greek scholars are persuaded that
the genitive in
2 John 9
is
subjective, i.e., the teaching from Christ. He mentions the names of A.T.
Robertson, B.F. Wescott and A.E. Brook. He could have added: J.H.
Thayer, G. Abbott-Smith, Edward Robinson, John Stott, R.C.H. Lenski, and
a great host of others. The late J.W. Roberts noted: “Undoubtedly the
majority of commentators are on the side of the subjective genitive”
(The Letters of John, Sweet, 1968, p. 164).
But here is
a crucial question. Is there anything — in either scripture or logic —
that would lead one to the conclusion that he must believe the “teaching
about Christ,” namely, that Jesus once lived on earth “in the flesh,”
but that he is free to disregard the “teaching from Christ,” e.g., that
which provides direction in worship, the plan of salvation, eschatology,
etc.? Does that make any sense at all? And yet Osburn claims that an
application of 2 John 9 to such matters reflects a “sectarian”
disposition (p. 73).
Logical Implications
If the
expression “teaching of Christ” in 2 John 9 is exclusively a warning
about denying “the doctrine of the incarnation,” i.e., the truth that
“Jesus Christ has come in the flesh” (Osburn, pp. 82-83), the following
conclusion would appear to follow. The Jehovah’s Witnesses, Unitarians,
and a wide variety of modernists must not be excluded from Christian
fellowship, because all these folks subscribe to the idea that Jesus of
Nazareth lived in the flesh. The Watchtower people argue that he was
“nothing more than a perfect man,” but they do not repudiate his fleshly
nature.
Even
modernists believe that a man named “Jesus” lived twenty centuries ago,
and that, in “some sense,” he was divine. They repudiate, however, the
fact that he was born of the virgin, that he performed miracles, or that
he was raised from the dead. Why would it be more serious to deny
Christ’s human nature than to repudiate the evidences of his divine
essence?
But our
brother admits that a rejection of “Jesus as Lord” is included in this
warning. How does he arrive at this conclusion? He goes outside of 2
John, and imports material from 1 John
(2:22; 4:2,15)
to support
his argument (p. 88). Very well, comparisons are a legitimate
methodology. It is hardly consistent, however, for Osburn to do
precisely that, and then criticize others (pp. 74ff) who have called
attention to the use of the subjective genitive in connection with the
Lord’s “teaching” in John’s Gospel record, and in the book of Revelation
(see John 7:17; 18:19; cf. 1 John 1:5; Revelation
2:14-15).
The problem
with these brethren is not grammar; it is “heart.” They have abandoned
the ideal of restoring primitive Christianity. They covet fraternization
with the sects, and want to take the whole brotherhood with them. But
many refuse to go. May their numbers increase.
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