Part Two: Nurtured by
Cynicism
In a previous article, we revealed the
source of the fallacious and confusing claim that the gospel is
distinct from doctrine. We have noted that C.H. Dodd (1884-1973),
Church of England professor at Cam-bridge, promoted this concept in
his day and was widely received by his contemporaries.
Dodd - Ketcherside Connection
Sadly, Dodd's false doctrine did not
stay in England. His popularity in denominational circles did not
escape the notice of men among us who had an axe to grind, an agenda
to keep, a cynical attitude to promote. None was more cynical of
"traditional orthodoxy" or more willing to violate sound doctrine
among churches of Christ than Carl Ketcherside, editor of Mission
Messenger.
Carl Ketcherside was considered a
radical spokes-man of bizarre causes in the early 1950's. Arrested
once on a college campus because of his invasive tactics among young
students, Ketcherside connected with Dodd in a strange way.
Originally, Ketcherside opposed "located preachers" because of his
application of the gospel/doctrine distinction. He, like Dodd
(perhaps because of Dodd), advocated that the "gospel" (containing
seven core facts) had to be "preached" (kerysein), while "doctrine"
(everything else but gospel) had to be "taught" (didaskein). In the
earlier years, he drew such a rigid line of fellowship on his views
that most brethren were excluded. Later, he switched and, accepting
tenets of Calvinism like the imputation of Christ's righteousness,
opened his arms in fellowship with nearly anyone who accepted his
"gospel" definition. He made the classic distinction between gospel
and doctrine as did Dodd and was led to accept a broader fellowship
with those who held doctrinal differences. Let me emphasize that
there is not a man living who can be consistent, accept Dodd's
premise, and fail to accept doctrinal differences as unimportant to
fellowship.
Ketcherside accepted the gospel/doctrine
distinction with a vengeance.
"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"
("Twisted Scriptures," Mission Messenger, Dec.1972, p. 181). "Not
one apostolic letter is a part of the gospel of Christ . . . the
letter to the Galatians was not a part of the gospel" (Ibid., Feb.
1973, p. 20). Under this flag, he spent years promoting an expanded
fellowship with all who accepted the deity of Christ (gospel)
regardless of their doctrinal persuasions and practices. He was
equally at home among Christian Churches, Pentecostals, Catholics
and any group nominally accepting the deity of Christ (gospel).
A contemporary of Ketcherside, Leroy
Garrett, stated the classical deductive position which derives from
the gospel/doctrine distinction. Speaking of Galatians 1:6-9, he
said, "This passage is abused in our day in such a manner that the
effect is as much a perversion as it was with the Judaizers in
Galatia. One is preaching `another gospel,' we are told, if he holds
some doctrinal error, or what is presumed to be an error, such as
maintaining a TV program like Herald of Truth or using an instrument
in congregational singing" ("The Word Abused," Restoration Review,
XVII, No. 3, p. 42).
He added, "The gospel is thus made to
embrace all of our deductions, inferences and interpretations that
extend throughout the New Covenant scriptures. A brother who visits
from the Christian Church is not called on for anything, nor is he
even recognized as a preacher of the gospel, all because he is
`wrong' on music . . ." (Ibid.).
"The implications of all this to unity
and fellowship are weighty. It means that the gospel itself, not our
doctrinal interpretations, is the basis of our being one in Christ
and in fellowship with each other. That is, when one believes in
Jesus and obeys him in baptism, he is our brother and in the
fellowship . . . This is oneness and this is unity. That fellowship
is strengthened and made joyful by doctrine, but it is the gospel
and not doctrine that determines the fellowship" (Ibid.).
Though Ketcherside and Garrett were not
respected, generally, among brethren, either conservative or
liberal, others within the "mainstream" of liberal churches were
reading, accepting and nurturing the expanded fellowship that
"gospel" or "word of the cross" preaching permitted.
Dodd - Ketcherside -
Liberal Connection
Larry West, in an article in World Radio
News (Nov-Dec, 1993, p. 2) came down clearly on the side of
compromise. Commenting on the heritage that he grew up in (and
evidently now rejects), he said, "The problem came, however, with
what the emphasis led to. With our craving to restore the `pattern,'
many have in the process de-emphasized the `power' (Rom. 1:16)."
Lest there be any doubt about his meaning, he added, "Restoring `the
pattern of the New Testament church' shifted the cry away from the
cross of Christ and onto the church of Christ. It got off the
resurrected Saviour and on the saved. Over the years, then, our
movement became centered largely on correcting religious error
rather than on the proclaiming of a Saviour."
Why would he teach such a thing? How
could he come to such a conclusion? First of all, there must be a
re-definition of terms as Dodd and others advocated. "There is a
distinctive difference between the Gospel and the rest of the Bible.
All the Bible (not just the New Testament) points to the Gospel
(that's why the Bible is generically called `good news'), but there
is a definite distinction between the specific Gospel of Christ
(Rom. 1:3-4) and the other points of New Testament doctrine (or
teachings)."
The practical effects and application of
this error can be seen in the recent event in Florence, Alabama,
where the Magnolia church of Christ had a joint "Celebration of
Worship" with a Methodist church. "How," you might ask, "could
anyone justify this kind of digression?" Let the "gospel" preacher
explain. Joe Van Dyke of the Magnolia church said: "We're not here
together tonight to say that we agree on everything there is to
discuss. We're here to say that there's something greater that we
share in common than any-thing that would divide us." "The greater
things including the message of salvation, the death of Jesus on the
cross, the resurrection and the commandments to love the Lord God
with all our might and to love our neighbor as ourselves. The lesser
things include doctrine." (Quotes from The Voice, local church
bulletin edited by Larry Fain, Vol. 22, No. 12, December, 1993, in
an article, "A Sad Historic Event" by Gary Patton.)
Lest there be a misunderstanding that
some of these events are happening in out-of-the-way places, we are
reminded that the gospel/doctrine distinction is now assuming the
robe of scholarship since it is emanating from "the Holy Hill,"
Abilene, Texas. In The Cruciform Church, C. Leonard Allen (ACU
Press, Abilene, TX, 1990), quotes from C. H. Dodd as he takes up the
cause for getting the church back to the cross (thus, a "cruciform"
church). His premise is that we have left the "word of the cross"
out of our preaching as we have evolved to preach doctrine more than
gospel. He said, "In view of the displacement of the cross in the
Stone/Campbell movement, I answer that what was left was a distorted
and anemic gospel. The gospel of grace became a gospel of duty, law
and perfect obedience. Covenant, we might say, became contract" (p.
122). "As the cross was diminished in our movement, God's gracious
and deeply personal covenant, mediated by a stunning display of
suffering love, increasingly became a bare contract" (p. 123).
Not surprisingly, he footnotes C. H.
Dodd's The Parables of the Kingdom, The Apostolic Preaching and Its
Development, and The Johannine Epistles. It is not surprising since
he occupies the same basic error as Dodd on the gospel/doctrine
distinction. Although his "core gospel" definition differs from Dodd
(as does every other person who attempts to define a non-biblical
position), he seeks to build a case study on his definition of the
"core gospel." His conclusion is that we are guilty today of a kind
of "doctrine idolatry" (p. 87). Such a "doctrine idolater" forgets
that "Doctrines do not save us; we are saved by Christ. Doctrines do
not cleanse us from our sins; it is the efficacious blood of Christ.
. . . We are not baptized into [doctrines], but into Christ. We do
not hope in them, trust in them, glory in them, but in Christ Jesus
our Lord" (quoting Charles L. Loos, teacher with Campbell at Bethany
College, p. 89). Please let it register that, in the thinking of
many brethren, it is "Christ or doctrine," or "Christ versus
doctrine." Depending on how far the new definition of "gospel"
extends, doctrines that insist on vocal music, baptism for remission
of sins, local church autonomy, etc. are "doctrinal idolatry."
In yet another example of how far this
gospel/ doctrine error has extended into mainstream thinking is Bill
Love's, The Core Gospel. Another book from ACU Press, it purports to
be an analysis of four generations of preachers (from Stone/Campbell
to the present). Somewhat arrogantly, Love defines gospel in a way
that suits his purpose, not the biblical definition. Though
different from Dodd or Ketcherside in some aspects of definition, it
differs not at all in application. But, having arbitrarily
substituted his definition "rule," Love measures these preachers of
yesteryear and finds them wanting. Naturally, since they did not
have the advantage of knowing they were going to be measured by
Love's "rule of gospel" they did not include enough "gospel" to suit
Love. Consequently, men like Stone and Campbell, Moses Lard, and T.
W. Brents, fail to pass muster. Likewise, men of the stature of T.
B. Larimore, Benjamin Franklin, J. W. McGarvey, J. D. Tant and Foy
E. Wallace, among others, failed Love's test. Again and again, the
"core gospel" so reminiscent of C. H. Dodd, limited in scope to the
"death, burial and resurrection of Christ," is applied retroactively
to recorded sermons to show how deficient all these men were in
"gospel preaching." All these great giants of the past, according to
Love, did not preach enough "gospel." Would to God that I could
measure something. How many people did Larimore and Franklin and
Campbell convert to Christ compared to Love, Allen, Ketcherside and
cohorts? Where are the waters being stirred in baptism by Love and
Allen compared to the scores of thousands who came to Christ under
restoration preaching? J.D. Tant alone, with all his "doctrine
idolatry," probably led more to Christ than all these combined.
Where are the people who are coming out of denominationalism to
Christ under the preaching of Love and Allen as they did under
restoration preaching? Are not the churches under Love's and Allen's
influence of soft preaching and the New Hermeneutic returning to
denominationalism? For sure, no one can accuse them of "doctrine
idolatry." What would Love and Allen do in the face of the onslaught
of premillennialism? Foy E. Wallace met them and defeated them with
the gospel that portrays Christ on the throne of David. Would Love's
and Allen's "gospel" stem the tide of digression on
premillennialism, or on any other point of "doctrine"? I think not.
As someone has said, "Let your opponent
define the terms of your disagreement and he will whip you every
time." Even so, let latter day "scholars" wrest the meaning of
"gospel" and "word of the cross" to exclude "sound doctrine," and
you can be chided for "anemic preaching" and "doctrine idolatry."
What is amazing is that they are so successful with this subterfuge.
Dodd - Ketcherside -
Liberal - Conservative Connection
Recent articles from brethren much
closer to home reveal how deeply engrained this error has become and
how prevalent a part of our thinking it has become. Though it is
quite evident that not everyone is aware of the source of this error
nor how deeply it has been accepted by the New Unity Movement or the
New Hermeneutic crowd, it is nevertheless being used by brethren who
ought to know better. It is not essential to know the history of an
error to oppose it. But it is without excuse to allow someone in
error to define biblical terms in an un-biblical way and to use that
error to criticize sound brethren.
It has already been related that Leonard
Allen in The Cruciform Church made the charge against T. W. Brents
and Alexander Campbell (et al) that they began a drift away from the
emphasis on the cross to an emphasis on the church by their attempts
to "restore the ancient order of things." They imply that the drift
away from the cross became a stampede in later generations. This
charge is based upon the faulty definition of the gospel being
distinct from doctrine.
Though one should avoid crying "wolf "
at the drop of a phrase or cited quotation, it seems that we have a
right to be alarmed when brethren expose true cynicism toward
doctrinal preaching. It is being repeated again and again that
doctrinal preaching is not gospel preaching. Even among the
advocates (maybe even especially from the advocates) of "positive
Christianity," the most negative reactions arise to doctrinal
soundness. If there is a need to balance our preaching so as to
encompass the "whole counsel of God," let us not allow cynicism to
be our teacher.
Guardian of Truth - July 7,
1994
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