One writer
has referred to the instrument of Jesus' death as ``The Polished Mahogany
Cross'' (Bill Love, The Core Gospel, p. vii). He intended by this to
emphasize that our generation does not see the cross as an instrument of
torture as did the first century where it was the common instrument of Roman
punishment for criminals. Consequently, that writer and others have
concluded that our generation has failed to place the cross in its proper
place in God's grace, ignoring or unwittingly omitting the cross as an
expression of God's grace and the ``drawing power'' (John 12:32) of
God unto salvation. In its place, we are accused, we have put an emphasis on
doctrine, splitting the Bible into bits and pieces, placing theology and its
study on a higher plane than that of the ``core gospel.'' The accusation is
untrue and unfounded.
This ``core
gospel'' has been the subject of much discussion. A British theologian of
the Church of England by the name of C. H. Dodd (1930's) has written
extensively on the theory (an avowed modernist, he denied the inspiration of
the Bible). His views have been carried into the mainstream of Protestant
religious thought and, to one extent or another, into the thinking of some
brethren. Carl Ketcherside, for one, accepted his definition of a ``core
gospel'' and changed his religious views to accommodate it. Ketcherside was
considered a maverick in his early preaching and writing days but lived long
enough to see his views gain popularity. In Love's book, this ``core
gospel'' achieves a status of scholarship (in some circles).
Background of ``Core Gospel''
Concept
``Dodd
maintained that the original disciples who heard Jesus speak and who later
became disciples did so with the anticipation of an immediate return of
Jesus while they lived. When Jesus did not immediately return, they began to
memorize the sayings of Jesus and formed a primitive catechism to preserve
these sayings (he did not believe in plenary inspiration). Later disciples,
including Luke, Paul and Peter, incorporated these catechisms into their
writings as they attempted to explain within doctrinal and moral
instructions why Jesus delayed His coming. 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 kerusssein
(proclaim, preach it). The doctrinal and 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''
(Tom Roberts, Neo-Calvinism in the Church of Christ, p. 48).
```The
significant features of Dodd's theory which have been described in their
developmental sequence are:
1. In the
earliest church a distinct activity called preaching was practiced.
2. Preaching
had a particular content, the kerygma, which was the earliest missionary
message of the church.
3. Fragments
of this earliest message are discernible in the written record, Scripture.
4. Teaching
is a second, distinct activity of the early church.
5. The
content of teaching is primarily ethical instruction and exhortation. Its
form is derived from Jewish antecedents.
6. The
practice and content of teaching are the product of the evolutionary
development of the earliest church as it awaited the second coming of Jesus'
(Preaching and Teaching in the Earliest Church, Robert C. Worley, pp. 22,
23).'' ibid. p. 51.
``Following
the various suggestions of German form critics, Dodd pieced together
fragments from the various books and chapters of the Pauline writings to
form what he called the kerygma....In a modification of Dodd's original
proposal that the kerygma consisted of seven items, Hunter and Craig
proposed a kerygma with three points. They were not in agreement on the
three points. Craig, in addition, maintained that considerable freedom was
exercised by the early preachers in following the formula....Filson....
maintained he) could find five facts...Glasson, like Filson, has argued for
a kerygma with five facts, not identical with Filson's....Gartner suggested
a seven-point kerygma with significant modification of Dodd's original seven
points'.''(ibid. p. 52).
```Dodd's seven points were: The prophecies are fulfilled -- a new age
inaugurated by the coming of Christ; Jesus born of seed of David; died
according to the scriptures; was buried; rose on the third day; exalted at
God's right hand; will come again' (The Apostolic Preaching, p 17.'' ibid,
p. 52.
Redefinition of ``Gospel'' and ``Doctrine'' To Establish ``Core Gospel''
Carl
Ketcherside advocated that the ``core gospel'' ```consisted of the life,
death, burial, resurrection, ascension, coronation and glorification of
Jesus' (Mission Messenger, Dec., 1972, p. 180).'' ibid, p. 53. He also said
that ``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'' (ibid, p. 53). ``Not one apostolic letter
is a part of the gospel of Christ...the Roman letter was not a part of the
gospel...the letter to the Galatians was not a part of the gospel'' (ibid,
p. 53).
```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...That fellowship is strengthened and made joyful by doctrine,
but it is the gospel and not doctrine that determines the fellowship...'
(Leroy Garrett, ``The Word Abused,'' Restoration Review, Vol. XVII, No. 3,
pp. 42-46)'', ibid, pp. 54-55.
``Everywhere
Paul went he established churches preaching the same gospel of Jesus
crucified and raised. Along the way, in and out of scrapes, he wrote letters
to the churches he had established. In those letters he applied the `word of
the cross,' exploring the implications of the core gospel for daily church
problems.'' ibid. p. 39.
``It means
that the gospel itself, not our doctrinal instructions, is the basis of our
being one in Christ and in fellowship with each other.'' Ibid, p. 59.
What the Bible Teaches About Gospel/Doctrine
1. 1 Tim.
1:8-11 (gospel includes doctrine); 2 Tim. 3:16 doctrine includes
gospel).
2. John
18:19 -- Jews asked Jesus about his ``teaching'' (doctrine). Was it
gospel?
3. Acts
5:21, 28, 42 -- Disciples taught the gospel.
4. Acts
13:12 (note vs. 7, 8, 10)
5. Acts
17:3, 10, 11, 18, 19 (preaching & teaching used interchangeably).
6. Acts
20:20 -- declaring and teaching the word
7. Acts
20:25 -- Paul preached (kerusso) to elders
8. Rom.
1:15 -- gospel preached to church at Rome
9. Rom.
6:17 -- teaching the death, burial and resurrection (vs. 3ff)
10. 1 Cor.
11:26 -- we preach (proclaim) by taking the Lord's Supper
11. 2 Thes.
2:14, 15 -- traditions (core gospel?) were taught
12. 2 Tim.
4:2 -- preach the word with all teaching
13. Terms
``the faith,'' ``gospel,'' ``truth,'' ``word of God,'' ``word of the Lord,''
``doctrine,'' are all used interchangeably and refer to one another: Acts
17:3-9; Col. 1:5; Eph. 1:13; Jn. 8:32; Ja. 1:18, 21; Jn. 17:17-19; Jude 3;
Gal. 2:5, 14; Gal. 3:1; Phil. 1:27; Acts 13:5
Accusations Based on Faulty Redefinition
``Peter
preached Christ crucified and raised by the plan and power of God for the
salvation of all mankind [in Acts 2, tr]. That was the core gospel. That was
the nucleus of the gospel which changed the world.'' Love, The Core Gospel,
p. 32.
``In other
words, was the `word of the cross' central n our proclamation as it is in
the New Testament?'' ibid, p. 109.
``From the
very first something of the core gospel was missing in our Restoration
preaching.'' ibid. p. 152.
``When we
compare the first and second generations of Restoration preachers we see a
decline in mention of the core gospel from 56 to 46 percent.....in the case
of T. W. Brents the theme is present hardly at all.'' ibid. p. 180.
``This second
generation preaching shows a measurable decline in both the quantity and
quality of references to the cross. What the first generation considered
obvious and took for granted seemed less obvious to the second generation.''
ibid. p. 181.
``In this
third generation we see a further decline in percentages of sermons with
references to the core gospel. The rate of mention declined from 56 in the
first generation to 46 in the second to 26 in the third. Even that low
figure does not truly indicate the poverty of their preaching regarding the
cross.'' ibid, p. 207.
``All in all,
the fourth generation's sermons in the composite show further decline in
mention of the core gospel, from 26% to 23%......My own judgment is that the
seeds of the first generation's church-centered `Reformation' had by this
time taken root, come to full maturity and were bearing abundant fruit. Long
since had the focus shifted from Golgotha to Pentecost'' ibid. 239.
Someone has
said, ``Let your opponent define your terms and you will lose every
argument.'' We see the wisdom of this in our present difficulty. If
``gospel'' or ``core gospel'' is defined so as to include only seven (or
five, or three, etc.) items, then fellowship with God will depend only on
those things and one must preach about these things and these things only in
order to preach the gospel. Preaching about any other Bible subject would
not be preaching the ``gospel.''
If I
re-defined ``money'' to mean ``gold'' and then complained that I had no
money when I have $1 million in the bank, I would be playing fast and loose
with the truth.
If I
re-defined ``obedience'' to mean ``perfect works' salvation'' and then
complained that by preaching baptism you are guilty of believing in
salvation by works, I would also be playing fast and loose with the truth.
If I
re-defined ``gospel'' to mean only ``seven core facts about Jesus'' and then
complain that you are not preaching the gospel when you preach about the
church or morality or worship, I would be playing fast and loose with the
truth.
Now make the
application to the ``cross.'' If I re-define ``word of the cross'' to mean
only the passion and death of Jesus on Calvary and then complain that when
you preach about elders, organization of the church, morality, etc., you are
not preaching the ``word of the cross,'' I am also playing fast and loose
with the truth.
The real and
only fair consideration is, ``How does the Bible define the `word of the
cross,' and what does it mean to `preach Christ and him crucified'?'' Let
the Bible define its own terms.
The Word of the Cross Includes:
I. All the
fact, commands, and promises of the gospel centered in Jesus Christ --
Rom. 1:16, 17. Are only the ``red letters'' of the New Testament the
doctrine of Christ or is all scripture included?
II. The
entire gospel system -- Acts 20:20-27; 1 Cor. 1:18
A. Preaching
all that the Bible says about the man Jesus Christ) and the plan he gave to
save souls -- Mk. 16:15-16; Matt. 28:18-20; ``all things I have
commanded you'' have Jesus at their core as much as the facts of the cross.
B. Preaching
grace and the obedience of faith -- Rom. 1:5; Rom. 16:25-26.
C. Preaching
about baptism, the church and godly living -- Titus 2:11-14.
D. Preaching
about the faithful lives of Christians -- Mt. 26:13; 2 Cor. 8:18.
E. Preaching
repentance and the kingdom -- Mark 1:14-15
F. Preaching
that Gentiles are a part of the kingdom -- Acts 15:7; opposing as
false teachers those who deny it -- Gal. 2:5-6.
G. Condemning
ungodly living -- Gal. 2:14; 5:16-26; 1 Pet. 4:1-3.
H. Preaching
about the church since Christ and the church are sometimes used
interchangeably in the scriptures -- 1 Cor. 12:12-13; Acts 8:1, 3; Gal.
1:13; 1 Cor. 15:9; Acts 9:5; 2 Cor. 5:19; Eph. 2:16.
I. Connecting
the cross and its centrality to every New Testament truth. It is a sin to
exclude the cross itself from any doctrine; it is sin to preach only the
cross to the exclusion of any doctrine. Examples: Lord's supper, baptism,
elders, work of the church, worship of the church, church discipline, etc.
J. Preaching
through Romans-Revelation is also a part of ``gospel preaching'' and ``word
of the cross preaching.'' The cross of Christ undergirds every syllable of
the New Testament and Romans - Revelation is as much a part of the gospel as
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
K. Preaching
that is a balance between the story of the cross and the effect of that
sacrifice in a world of sin. Without the cross, the world would be lost, the
church would be useless, its work would be meaningless and our obedience
would be but vanity (1 Cor. 15:19).
L. Preaching
in opposition to those who would re-define the gospel -- Gal. 1:6-9; 2
John 9-11; Jude 3.
For more
study, see ``Preaching the Cross: Agreeing with a Brother on Some
Fundamentals,'' Larry Hafley, Guardian of Truth, 11/5/92.)
-- Watchman, October 1998
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