There are two basic attitudes relative
to the Christian religion.
One disposition affirms that Jehovah,
across several millennia of history, meticulously prepared for the
advent of Christ and the spiritual system which he would inaugurate.
It argues that Christianity, as such existed in the first century
under the guidance of inspired teachers, was exactly what God
intended it to be.
Moreover, this view asserts that this
divine plan, as designed by the eternal and omniscient Creator,
would be perpetually relevant, thus age-lasting (cf. Dan. 2:44).
Those who advocate this view maintain that if the world is ever to
be saved, it must conform to the mold of Christianity—not the
reverse (cf. Rom. 12:2).
On the other hand, there is the theory
that the Christian religion was never designed to be static.
Proponents of this concept allege that beyond a few minimal
components (e.g., the fact that Jesus is the Son of God and that he
died for the sins of humanity) Christianity is free to change with
the times. It may adapt to various cultures. Its forms may be
altered to meet the whims of new generations.
The Christian philosophy is thus free to
experience an “evolutionary” development; hence, it is suggested,
the “Christianity” of today may be vastly different from that of the
first century, yet still have Heaven’s approval.
As to the validity of these two
ideologies, the first represents the position of the Bible; the
second has no scriptural basis whatsoever. Amazingly, however, it is
advanced by a vast number of people who profess respect for Jesus
Christ.
It is not surprising that society finds
the “new Christianity” so appealing. We have been brainwashed to
believe that everything new is better. The new automobiles, washing
machines, etc., are better than those of older vintage. Almost every
product in the stores carries the claim “new and improved.” The
reasoning thus is: “Why is not the same principle true in religion?
Why not have a new and improved Christianity?”
As secular influences conditioned
society’s thinking in this wrong-headed direction, religion was
making its contribution as well. The theologians of Catholicism have
long contended that the Church has the option of evolving with time
and culture. Cardinal John Henry Newman, one of Romanism’s most
influential writers, declared that “the Church” has the right to
alter its practices in the interest of converting the pagan. He
conceded that the use of such items as incense, holy water,
sacerdotal vestments, etc., are “all of pagan origin,” but their use
is acceptable for they are “sanctified by their adoption into the
Church” (1920, 373).
In his popular book, A Catholic
Dictionary, Donald Attwater has argued similarly (1942, 363). For a
further discussion of this point, see John Mosheim’s Ecclesiastical
History (1822, 105) .
The Catholic Church makes no apology for
the fact that she can modify her doctrine as times change. Do you
remember when it was considered a sin to eat meat on Friday?
The Protestant sects, in actual
practice, subscribe to a similar “evolutionary Christianity.” For
example, The Standard Manual For Baptist Churches by Edward Hiscox
states:
“It is most likely that in the Apostolic
age when there was but “one Lord, one faith, and one baptism,” and
no differing denominations existed, the baptism of a convert by that
very act constituted him a member of the church, and at once endowed
him with all the rights and privileges of full membership. In that
sense, “baptism was the door into the church.” Now, it is
different.” (1951, 22; emphasis added).
Why is it different? Who made it so?
Certainly not God! Rather, it was presumptuous men who felt they
were empowered with the authority to overhaul the divine plan.
Restoring Christian Morality
Not only has “Christendom” contended
that it is permissible to change the original forms and ceremonies
of New Testament doctrine, it has even radically altered its concept
of morality.
Several decades ago there could not be
found a solitary religious body even remotely professing
Christianity that would endorse the sin of homosexuality. Now the
religious defenders of sodomy are disgustingly numerous. But why
not? If Christianity can be redesigned with reference to its
religious dogma, why cannot its moral attitudes be amended as well?
A Restoration Plea Needed Within
the Lord’s Church
The churches of Christ are not without
some problems in this matter. Whereas we once proudly sounded forth
the restoration plea, i.e., we sought to call our religious fellows
back to the pristine simplicity of primitive Christianity, voices of
dissent are now questioning the validity of such an approach.
Some, like Don White, editor of The
Exegete, openly doubt that “primitive Christianity is the normative
pattern for all ages.” White declares: “Nowhere does the New
Testament provide explicit scriptural basis for a restoration
principle—no text explicitly states that later generations should
follow the primitive church or restore it.”
White asserts: “Pattern theology is not
supported linguistically by the New Testament.” This disposition,
which appears to be gaining momentum within our fellowship, reflects
a sad condition in the kingdom of Christ.
The fact of the matter is, the Bible
plainly teaches that when God Almighty establishes a system of
religion, its obligations are to remain precisely in tact for as
long as it is designed to last, and no man has the authority to
modify it. Such was true of the Mosaic economy until God himself
abolished that regime (Eph. 2:15; Col. 2:14), and it is no
less true of the Christian Way, which is to abide until the end of
time (Matt. 28:18-20).
Let us consider evidence from both of
these areas.
Restoration in Israel
During the Mosaic period, the Lord
charged Israel with rigid accountability to the law. Ye shall
observe to do therefore as Jehovah your God hath commanded you: ye
shall not turn aside to the right hand or to the left. Ye shall walk
in all the way which Jehovah your God commanded you, that ye may
live, and that it may be well with you (Dt. 5:32-33).
Again, hear the law: Ye shall not add
unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish from
it, that ye may keep the commandments of Jehovah your God which I
command you (Dt. 4:2; cf. Prov. 30:6).
Under the Old Testament economy,
departure from the divinely ordered plan was severely censured.
Surely no clearer example of this principle can be found than that
of Jeroboam, the first king of northern Israel. His apostasy from
the law of Moses is carefully detailed in 1 Kings 13.
Instead of honoring Jehovah without the
aid of a graven image (cf. Ex. 20:4), he set up golden calves
through which to reverence the Lord (cf. 1 Kgs. 12:28; Ex. 32: 4,
5).
Rather than worshipping at Jerusalem,
Bethel and Dan became the centers of Israelite service.
The priesthood was not confined to the
tribe of Levi; rather, priests were taken from among all the people.
The feast of tabernacles was changed
from the fifteenth day of the seventh month to the fifteenth day of
the eighth month.
Now some would see very little, if any,
harm in such “minor” changes in the Mosaic plan. God’s attitude,
however, was considerably different. Some twenty-one times the Old
Testament mentions that Jeroboam “made Israel to sin” (cf. 1 Kgs.
14:16).
One of the truly thrilling Old Testament
accounts is that of 2 Kings 22 and 23, wherein Hilkiah the
high priest discovered a copy of the law in the rubble of the
temple. When the testimony of the scroll revealed a glaring
digression on the part of Israel, King Josiah proclaimed a dramatic
restoration back to the law (23:3).
As a consequence of his great
administration, the inspired writer says of Josiah: And like unto
him was there no king before him, that turned to Jehovah with all
his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his might, according
to all the law of Moses (23:25). Clearly Josiah labored under
the conviction a restoration plea was valid and that his people
should return to the demands of the divine system.
And what of Jeremiah’s declaration in an
era when Israel was deep in apostasy? Thus saith Jehovah, Stand ye
in the ways and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good
way; and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls
(Jer. 6:16). But as it was then, so is it today, some declare:
“We will not walk therein.”
The Restoration Principle in the
New Testament
In the New Testament, scores of passages
demand adherence to the divine pattern. Consider the following:
The early church is commended for
“continuing steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine,” etc. (Acts
2:42). Moreover, as a consequence of such, “the multitude of
them that believed were of one heart and soul” (Acts 4:32).
These passages suggest a unity of practice in religion.
Paul reminded the brethren in Rome that
they had been made “free from sin” due to the fact that they had
been obedient to a certain “form [pattern] of teaching” (Rom.
6:17, 18). That is pattern theology.
The saints in Rome were admonished to
“mark them that are causing the divisions and occasions of
stumbling, contrary to the doctrine which ye learned: and turn away
from them” (Rom. 16:17). If there is no set pattern of New
Testament doctrine, how could one ever be required to turn away from
those who do not practice it?
The inspired Paul taught those at
Corinth that they were not to go “beyond the things which are
written” (1 Cor. 4:6, ASV). This clearly shows that spiritual
activity is circumscribed by the Word.
To the brethren at Thessalonica, and
also to Timothy, Paul warned of a “falling away,” indeed, a
“departure from the faith” (2 Thes. 2:3; 1 Tim. 4:1ff; 2 Tim.
4:1ff). The expression “the faith” denotes that body of doctrine
proclaimed by inspired teachers (cf. Gal. 1:23; Jude 3). If
the church has the option of continually modifying biblical truth,
how could one ever fall away from the faith?
The apostle informed Timothy that there
is a “pattern of sound words” (2 Tim. 1:13), and the young
evangelist was to abide in the things he had learned from Paul
(3:14). Timothy was to commit that same truth to other faithful
brethren (2:2), and charge men not to teach a “different
doctrine” (1 Tim. 1:3). Paul states that those who digress
from the “sound words” are merely “puffed up, knowing nothing” (1
Tim. 6:3, 4).
The writer of Hebrews affirms that
Moses, in constructing the tabernacle, was warned by God that he
must “make all things according to the pattern,” which was showed to
him at Horeb (8:5). Do we, as recipients of the “better
covenant” (7:22; 8:6), have a lesser responsibility as we
minister to God in his church, of which the tabernacle was but a
type (cf. 9:1-10)? It is unbelievable that anyone would even
suggest such!
John plainly declares that those who go
beyond the “doctrine of Christ” have no fellowship with God (2
Jn. 9).
In view of the foregoing passages (and a
host of others), the notion of an “evolutionary church,” a sort of
plastic Christianity, is demonstrated to be totally false. The plea
for a restoration of first-century religion is valid. It is
thoroughly biblical, and those who repudiate it have sorely drifted
from the Holy Scriptures.
REFERENCES
Attwater, Donald Ed. 1942. A Catholic
Dictionary. New York, NY: The Macmillan Company.
Hiscox, Edward. 1951. The Standard
Manual For Baptist Churches. Philadelphia, PA: American Baptist
Publication Society.
Mosheim, John. 1822. Ecclesiastical
History. Vol. 1. London, England: A. and R. Spottiswoode,
New-Street-Square.
Newman, John Henry. 1920. An Essay on
the Development of Christian Doctrine. New York, NY: Longmans, Green
and Company.
SCRIPTURE REFERENCES
Daniel 2:44; Romans 12:2; Ephesians
2:15; Colossians 2:14; Matthew 28:18-20; Deuteronomy 5:32-33;
Deuteronomy 4:2; Proverbs 30:6; 1 Kings 13; Exodus 20:4; Exodus
32:4, 5; 1 Kings 22; Jeremiah 6:16; Acts 2:42; Acts 4:32; Romans
6:17, 18; Romans 16:17; 1 Corinthians 4:6; 2 Thessalonians 2:3; 1
Timothy 4:1; 2 Timothy 4:1; Galatians 1:23; Jude 3; 2 Timothy 1:13;
1 Timothy 1:3; 1 Timothy 6:3, 4; 2 John 9
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