As our readers may know, we have been in 
			controversy with those who declare that they see a danger among us. 
			The danger, they say, is this; we have put our faith in the Bible, 
			in the word, and not in him who is "the Word." While they agree that 
			we must believe the Bible, they argue that we are trusting in the 
			plan of Scripture more than in "the man" of Scripture. On the 
			liberal fringe of the faith, men like Bill Love and C. Leonard 
			Allen, have made this charge out loud, in print. At least, they have 
			couched their concerns and concepts in an academic robe. Others, 
			like Rubel Shelly, spout out and spit up these charges wherever they 
			go.
			
			Affected and infected by this concept, 
			some among us have picked up the charge, saying that first century 
			disciples did not submit or surrender to a pattern, but to a person. 
			Our judgment is that some who have made similar statements are well 
			meaning. They think they have a thought that will indeed draw us 
			back, closer, to Christ. Of course, everyone is for that. Our fear 
			is that even some good men do not recognize or perceive the dangers 
			inherent in echoing this view (that trust in Christ can be separated 
			from trust in his word). As it is twisted and tortured by liberals, 
			this theme is used as a weapon by those who are bent on making havoc 
			of the church by privily bringing in damnable heresies under the 
			guise of "Christ, not commands; the Savior, not the system; the 
			Person, not the pattern."
			
			As Solomon said, "There is nothing new 
			under the sun." Accordingly, I recently found this article from the 
			pen of Benjamin Franklin. This myth, this so called crisis, this 
			imaginary bogey-man (that we are emphasizing the Bible rather than 
			the Lord), was explored, exposed, and exploded by brother Franklin 
			nearly 140 years ago. Hear him.
			
			Franklin: The Spirit, The Word, The 
			Christ It appears more difficult at the present time to induce men 
			to be content with simple Christianity, in spirit and practice, 
			without any mixture of humanisms, than at any former period. The 
			people have become so accustomed to leaning upon the human that they 
			can scarcely conceive of the possibility of trusting wholly in the 
			Divine. We, as a body of people, have made wonderful strides in 
			showing our neighbors of the sects the schismatical tendency of all 
			their creeds, the necessity of abandoning the whole of them and of 
			committing ourselves wholly to Christ as our leader and instructor. 
			But some of the controversies now going on show a wandering 
			disposition, dissatisfied with the simple belief and practice of 
			Christianity, as inconsistent with the unity of the Spirit and bond 
			of peace as the adoption and maintenance of a human creed.
			
			After preaching the plain gospel of 
			Christ, as the Disciples have done for more than thirty years, 
			gathering some three hundred thousand souls to the fold of Christ, 
			many of them from the contending parties around us, and uniting them 
			in the bond of peace and union, thus making ourselves felt as no 
			other people have done in this century, a brother perceives where a 
			slight mistake may have occurred. He becomes alarmed, looks upon all 
			that has been done as nothing, and declares that nothing great and 
			good will be accomplished till the evil is corrected. He just now 
			perceives that there is danger of men resting their faith in the 
			word, and not in the Divine and glorious per-son revealed through 
			the word. He thinks many are deceived in relying simply upon the 
			word in the place of relying upon Him who gave the word. He now 
			perceives the secret of there not being devotion, piety and zeal. It 
			is found in the stupid mistake of believing the truth, in the place 
			of believing in Him who is revealed through the truth.
			
			This pretty little distinction is 
			elaborated in many sermons, upon many pages, and upon a thousand 
			tongues. The whole phalanx of word-alone men are now called to an 
			account, and shown at great length, with profound learning and 
			philosophy, that their stupid mistake has been that they have 
			believed the word, trusted in the word, relied upon the word, and 
			preached the word, but lost sight of the glorious person of Christ 
			revealed through the word. . . But no change follows all this 
			wonderful discovery and very profound distinction. No increase of 
			piety, zeal, love or good works follow. No conversion of sinners 
			follow any more than before, nor anything different, except 
			contention, strife and confusion.
			
			On the other hand, here come the 
			word-alone men, accusing the former class with infidelity, or at 
			least teaching doctrines tending to a rejection of the word, looking 
			for something beyond and above the word, thus ignoring the word. 
			These, too, now stand in defense of the faith, and suffer for the 
			truth, and sound the warning voice of dangerous doctrine! Some of 
			the Disciples are on one side and some on the other, but the greater 
			portion do not know what the controversy is about, but think there 
			are good brethren on both sides. The only wonder with them is that 
			the parties should manifest so much irritability, use such severe 
			and harsh language and appear so much alarmed. They can perceive no 
			occasion for all this.
			
			Questions To Consider
			
			Where is the necessity of all this? When 
			did an attorney ever find it necessary to inform the jury that the 
			testimony was not the thing to be believed, but that that which was 
			revealed through the testimony was what was to be believed. In what, 
			except in religion, did any man ever think it necessary to caution 
			the people that the truth itself is not what is to be believed, but 
			that which is made known through the truth? . . . Did any man ever 
			believe the truth of the gospel and not believe in him whom the 
			truth of the gospel sets forth? Can any man believe the word and not 
			believe him who uttered it? Can any man have confidence in the word 
			and not have confidence in him who spoke the word? Is there such a 
			thing as trusting in the word and not trusting in the author of the 
			word? Can any man believe the word and not believe that which is 
			revealed in the word? If you believe the testimony of a witness, do 
			you not at the same time believe the witness and that which is 
			communicated through the testimony of the witness?
			
			Can any man receive the word the Father 
			gave Jesus, the word Jesus gave to the apostles, and the word which 
			the apostles by the Holy Spirit preached to us, and not believe the 
			Father who gave the word to the Son? not believe the Son, who gave 
			the word to the apostles? not believe the apostles who gave the word 
			to us? Can a man confide in the word the Father gave the Son, which 
			the Son gave the apostles and which the apostles have given to us, 
			and not confide in the Father, the Son and the apostles?
			
			Can a man confide in Jesus and not 
			confide in his word? or confide in his word and not confide in him? 
			Can a man confide in the Holy Spirit and not confide in his word? or 
			confide in his word and not confide in him? Can a man receive the 
			word of Jesus and not receive Jesus? Can any person believe the word 
			of the Holy Spirit and not receive the Holy Spirit? Can anyone obey 
			the word and not obey him who uttered the word? Can a man follow the 
			word spoken by the Spirit and not follow the Spirit? Can a man be 
			led by the word spoken by the Spirit and not be led by the Spirit? 
			Are not all those led by the teachings of the Spirit inscribed upon 
			the pages of the Bible, led by the Spirit?
			
			We put it to all those brethren engaged 
			in this controversy, to produce an instance of one human being led 
			by the teachings of the Spirit in the Bible, and not led by the 
			Spirit; or, one led by the Spirit not led by his teachings in the 
			Bible. "These things," says the Spirit . . . "are written that you 
			might believe." Believe what? "That Jesus is the Christ, the Son of 
			God." They are not written that you may have a peculiar view of 
			spiritual influence, but that you might believe that Jesus is the 
			Christ, we Son of God. What are we to believe for? "That you might 
			have life through his name." Here is t h e straight-forward work  no 
			... speculations, but the plain truth to be believed and the object 
			of believing it that the believer might have life.
			
			The Holy Spirit comes not asking you to 
			believe on himself, or some peculiar mode of his operation; but as a 
			witness bearing testimony of Jesus. Hence Paul says, "The Holy 
			Spirit also is a witness," and that no man can "call Jesus Lord, but 
			by the Holy Spirit." At the Jordan, when the Lord was baptized and 
			introduced to Israel, the Holy Spirit descended in bodily form and 
			rested upon him, thus indicating that all attention should be 
			directed to him. When the Lord ascended to heaven, he sent the 
			Spirit to the apostles, to bring all things to their remembrance, 
			guide them into all truth, . . . and thus through them spread out 
			his entire testimonies upon the sacred pages as left us from the 
			hands of the four evangelists, that we might believe that Jesus is 
			the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing we might have life 
			through his name. All this the Holy Spirit has done that we might 
			believe, or to enable us to believe.
			
			Can we receive his testimony and not 
			receive the glorious person of whom he testifies? or can we reject 
			his testimony without rejecting the glorious person of whom he 
			testifies? Certainly not.
			
			Shall we, then, confide in these Divine 
			testimonies of the Spirit, spread upon the sacred pages of the New 
			Testament, that we might believe, and set them before the world as 
			sufficient to enable all men to believe, or shall we declare these 
			testimonies of the Spirit insufficient, too weak and imperfect to 
			enable the sinner to believe, and maintain that the Spirit must come 
			to the sinner and give him further evidence that his testimony, . . 
			. is true, and thus enable him to believe?
			
			Let any man who wishes to fall, question 
			the all-sufficiency of the testimonies of the Spirit set forth in 
			the New Testament  testimony which we affirm to be complete and 
			perfect  to which the Spirit himself forbids any-thing added or 
			taken from. He who undertakes to depreciate this testimony, whether 
			ignorantly or in unbelief  we care not what his design weakens the 
			gospel argument precisely to the amount of his influence, apologizes 
			for the unbeliever, excuses him in his infidelity and strength-ens 
			his hands in sin. In the place of his being himself a believer in 
			the testimony of the Spirit, he is trifling with it, creating 
			distrust in the minds of others, and subverting that which all admit 
			to be the testimony of the Spirit of God.
			
			The One Safe Course
			
			There is but one safe course, and that 
			is to follow the apostles, preach the same truth preached by them, 
			relying upon the same testimony upon which they rested as 
			all-sufficient, and maintaining the self-evident truth, that all men 
			can believe it, when it is preached, and that they will be lost if 
			they do not believe it. This we are authorized to do, and this is 
			all we can do. Even this can only be done by believers. Skeptics 
			cannot do it effectually. But men who believe in Jesus with the 
			heart can preach Jesus to others, with full confidence that they can 
			believe in him also. They can bring all the testimony furnished by 
			the Holy Spirit in the New Testament before the mind of the 
			unbeliever. But if these are not sufficient to enable a man to 
			believe, they can do no more.
			
			The preacher may turn and preach to the 
			sinner that these testimonies are not sufficient, and (that) he must 
			have assistance from some other source; but he cannot give that 
			assistance, and preaching does not make it come. If it does not 
			come, who is to blame? Not the sinner; for he could not bring it. 
			Not the preacher; for he could not bring it. Where lies the blame, 
			then? The testimony the Spirit has given is not sufficient to enable 
			the sinner to believe. He cannot obtain power to believe. The 
			preacher has preached Christ and presented the testimonies of the 
			Spirit as found in the Scripture. But the sinner cannot believe till 
			the Spirit comes and gives his testimony efficiency. The Spirit does 
			not come. The man not only does not believe, but he can-not believe. 
			Who is to blame? The Spirit, according to this very pious and 
			spiritual theory, is to blame, because he did not come and do what 
			he left undone when he gave his testimony, what neither the preacher 
			nor the sinner could do was give his testimony efficiency.
			
			The difficulty in these times is not 
			that the testimony of the Spirit, inscribed upon the pages of the 
			New Testament, lacks efficiency, nor does the Spirit himself lack 
			efficiency, nor does the Lord lack efficiency. The Lord, the Spirit 
			and the testimony are efficient, and do their work.
			
			The lack of efficiency is on the part of 
			weak-minded and unbelieving, or skeptical preachers and church 
			members. Let them become efficient, strong in faith, giving glory to 
			God, and preach Jesus with great power, present the Divine 
			testimonies with full assurance of faith, and the work will go on. 
			The Lord will do his work. The Spirit will do his work, and do it 
			right. The testimony will do its work, and sinners will be saved. 
			The trouble is to get the preachers to do their work, do it right, 
			and thus operate rightly upon the world. Let us turn our attention 
			more especially to men, and try and induce them to operate right, 
			and all the balance will operate infallibly right. (Paragraphs, 
			subheadings inserted. Biographical Sketch And Writings of Elder 
			Benjamin Franklin, 338-343.)
			
			Guardian of Truth - January 18, 1996
			
				
					| 
					 
					
					For Past Auburn Beacons go to:
  
					www.aubeacon.com/Bulletins.htm    | 
					
					 
					
					Anyone can join the mailing list for the Auburn Beacon! Send 
				your request to: larryrouse@aubeacon.com  |