(This concludes a two-part study of C. 
			Leonard Allen's The Cruciform Church.Faulty reasoning 
			(non-sequiturs) by the author presents a warped view of the gospel 
			and the church of Christ. If this is representative of the thinking 
			among liberal brethren, there is little wonder as to the source of a 
			"new hermeneutic" and its effect upon churches who adopt it.)
			
			Non Sequitur: 
			Doctrine Idolatry
			
			I am sure that there are some folks 
			somewhere who elevate doctrine to idolatry and who worship the 
			Bible, considering it a talisman to ward off evil spirits. But I 
			must confess that I have not heard such teaching among my brethren. 
			Leonard Allen claims to have heard it a lot.
			
			This non sequitur states that "Even the 
			Bible itself or our own religious tradition can become idols" (p. 
			88). "It becomes an idol when our faith becomes focused on Scripture 
			rather than in the God Scripture reveals to us." He feels compell0d 
			to remind us that "Doctrines do not save us; we are saved by Christ" 
			(p. 89). This knowledge is too much! We are awed by such pearls of 
			wisdom. Actually, such smugness of religious superiority does little 
			to commend him. It does not follow that an obedience of doctrine 
			dethrones Jesus (1 John 5:3). It does not follow that a 
			faithful compliance with Scripture elevates it to 
			"doctrine-idolatry" (p. 89). Must it be "either/or" with regard to 
			Christ and Scripture? Can it not (must it not) be "both/and" Christ 
			and his message?
			
			It is not true that since God does 
			"impossibilities" (wonders, miracles), we cannot read the Bible with 
			our "analytic-technical" mindset and grasp what God is doing. The 
			God who does "impossibilities" is the God who has spoken to us in an 
			accommodative way (human language) and requires obedience (Matt. 
			7:21).
			
			Non Sequitur: The 
			Displaced Cross
			
			According to brother Allen, no other 
			subject comes anywhere near the importance of this one. His charge: 
			"First, as we shall see, `the word of the cross' has been 
			significantly displaced in the history of Churches of Christ. 
			Throughout the four generations since Stone and Campbell we have 
			tended to push the cross into the background and thus to proclaim an 
			anemic and distorted gospel" (p. 113).
			
			That this is a faulty premise (before we 
			look at the unwarranted conclusions) can be seen from Allen's 
			definition of the "word of the cross." Falling into the same error 
			as C. H. Dodd (seen in Allen's bibliography), Carl Ketcherside and 
			others before him, Allen limits "the word of the cross" or the 
			"gospel" to something vaguely defined as the "core message" or 
			"apostolic kerygma" that somehow "underlies the New Testament 
			writings" (p. 114). Whether or not Allen knows it, Dodd is a 
			modernist, denying the inspiration of Scripture. Yet Dodd is cited 
			by many as an authority on this disputed "core gospel." While some 
			demand five or more facts in this core gospel, Ketcherside required 
			seven: birth, life, death, burial, resurrection, ascension and 
			coronation of Jesus. No doctrines or commands are included in this 
			gospel. Dodd claimed to have identified passages that taught this 
			"core gospel" before redactors polluted the gospel with doctrinal 
			demands. Dodd's (and Ketcherside's) theology was "faith only" 
			(baptism is a command and not a part of the gospel) with salvation 
			being secured by the acceptance of this "gospel" for justification. 
			After one is saved, he may or may not accept some "doctrines" for 
			sanctification but no doctrinal flaw would interfere with 
			justification or limit fellowship with those who accepted the deity 
			of Christ based on the core gospel.
			
			Allen's premise is that the "gospel" is 
			limited, by definition, to the facts of Jesus' atoning work; 
			preaching the "word of the cross" is specific to those alone. 
			Preaching from the epistles would not be preaching the "gospel." 
			Allen's unwarranted conclusion, based on this faulty premise of 
			"gospel," is that many of us have displaced the "word of the cross." 
			If one allows his egregious definition, he is right. But Peter, Paul 
			and James would also be guilty, and that suggests the fault lies 
			with Allen's definitions and not our preaching.
			
			"Allen, like Don Quixote, tilts at 
			windmills, because he doesn't understand true gospel preaching. To 
			him, preaching about baptism, the church, the Lord's Supper, 
			marriage and divorce, or any doctrinal matter (including, 
			conceivably, the deity of Christ as doctrine) is not preaching `the 
			cross.'
			
			Allen, like Don Quixote, tilts at 
			windmills, because he doesn't understand true gospel preaching. To 
			him, preaching about baptism, the church, the Lord's supper, 
			marriage and divorce, or any doctrinal matter (including, 
			conceivably, the deity of Christ as doctrine) is not preaching "the 
			cross." Therefore he flays about like one possessed, decrying the 
			lack of cross-centered preaching.
			
			No one who is a Bible believer would 
			argue about the necessity of putting Christ as both center and 
			circumference of our faith and practice. Bring out all the 
			superlatives and they fail to do justice to God's love in Christ on 
			Calvary. But Allen has no corner on the market in appreciating the 
			Savior. We, too, understand atonement, justification, sacrifice and 
			propitiation. He chastises with-out reason for a perceived 
			displacement of Christ's passion on the cross when the fault lies 
			with his imperfect working hypothesis of the "word of the cross."
			
			This ill-conceived notion, however 
			absurd, is illustrated when Allen applies his theory to the giants 
			of the Restoration period (Campbell, Stone, Brents, Lard, etc.). 
			They were not "cross centered" in their writing and preaching, we 
			are told. Ignoring the fact that preaching the "word of the cross" 
			includes "the whole counsel of God" (Acts 20:27) by testifying "to 
			the gospel of the grace of God" (v. 24), Allen tilted at Campbell's 
			The Millennial Harbinger and Brents' The Gospel Plan of Salvation as 
			being "preoccupied with form, structure, and the setting in order of 
			what was lacking" (p. 117), thus displacing the "word of the cross." 
			Brother Allen gives little weight to the fact that sectarians of 
			that period readily agreed with Campbell and others as to the 
			atoning work of Jesus and the central place he occupied in their 
			faith. He seems oblivious to the fact that there were volumes of 
			things keeping sectarians in spiritual bondage that needed to be 
			addressed. It might be comfortable for Allen to sit in his ivory 
			tower at Abilenein 1990 and second guess the pioneers as they fought 
			daily battles for truth in 1840. But those stalwart men waged 
			battles with the sword of the Spirit and did not tilt at windmills. 
			It is ungracious, at this late date, with Calvin-ism (the error they 
			opposed) on the rise, for anyone to promote fellowship with the very 
			people Campbell and others fought. Much less is it gracious for 
			those in non-institutional churches (sound preachers) today to 
			parrot these unfounded charges against Campbell and Brents, using 
			the same faulty definitions of gospel and doctrine as they relate to 
			the word of the cross. The only thing "distorted and anemic" in this 
			context is the fact that some will not preach the word of the cross 
			in the biblical sense, being "ashamed" (Rom. 1:16) of the 
			full proclamation as too negative, too legalistic, too unloving. 
			Allen should not be too lonely in his ivory tower or tilting at 
			windmills.
			
			Non Sequitur: 
			Covenant or Contract
			
			In no other place of his book does Allen 
			reveal his ignorance of the Bible more than when he contrasts 
			covenant (gospel) and contract (doctrine). He charged that under 
			Campbell (and others) "the gospel of grace became a gospel of duty, 
			law, and perfect obedience. Covenant, we might say became contract. 
			. . Consider the difference between covenant and contract. Though 
			similar in some ways, they differ radically in spirit. A contract 
			defines a precise set of relationships and obligations, and if these 
			are correctly observed then the contractual obligations are fully 
			discharged and the benefits fully received.
			
			"But covenant in the biblical sense is 
			far different" (p. 122).
			
			Further, "God's covenant with people, 
			unlike a contract, always arises out of grace.... Contracts contain 
			little room for slippage. . . God's covenants, in contrast, always 
			begin with an act of grace . . . because they are rooted in love and 
			trust they contain elements of spontaneous giving and forgiving" 
			(pp. 122, 123). It is difficult to know where to begin to correct 
			such monstrous error.
			
			True, the Law of Moses was a contract 
			that required perfect obedience to merit salvation (Gal. 3:1-10, 
			but faithful obedience was never condemned (cf: life of Abraham, 
			Gen. 15:6; Rom. 4:1 ff; etc.). The Law of Moses was also a 
			covenant (Deut. 29:1; Jer. 31:31f; Heb. 8:8; 10:16; Exod. 
			24:3-10) that was a gift of God's grace. On the other hand, the 
			gospel of Christ is a law (Rom. 8:1-3; James 1:25), defining 
			"a precise set of relationships and obligations" (Matt. 7:21; 2 
			John 9-11; 1 John 5:3).
			
			We are under law today. It is no less 
			law because it incorporates grace and forgiveness (Rom. 8:1-3). 
			It is different from the Law of Moses in that it does not require 
			perfection (provision for forgiveness implies sin, 1 John 1). Grace 
			and law justification are mutually exclusive; but grace and 
			obedience to the Law of Christ (gospel and doctrine) are inclusive 
			of each other.
			
			Brother Allen betrays his lack of 
			knowledge even further by quoting from K. C. Moser (The Way of 
			Salvation). Moser advocated Calvinism regarding the imputation of 
			righteousness, the very thing Campbell, Stone, Brents and others 
			were fighting to destroy. By quoting from Moser and his Calvinism 
			(p. 123), Allen manifests ignorance as to the necessity of the 
			Restoration battles and intimates his own Calvinist leanings. Had 
			Leonard Allen lived during the Restoration era, he would, no doubt, 
			have been on the opposite side from Campbell and those who were 
			studying themselves out of Calvinistic error.
			
			Non Sequitur: 
			Spirit of the Age
			
			By this time we should know that it is 
			impossible to defeat the secularization of the world without the 
			full message of the New Testament. The good news about Jesus' deity, 
			alone, will not suffice. It is impossible for one to be converted to 
			Christ and to be motivated to godly living and self-denial without a 
			knowledge of the "whole counsel." When Paul wrote to Timothy, he 
			spoke of doctrine which is "according to the glorious gospel of the 
			blessed God" (1 Tim. 1:8-11). The doctrines of this gospel 
			included the truth about the lawless and insubordinate, unholy and 
			profane, murderers, fornicators, sodomites, kidnappers, liars, etc. 
			While some might be too timid to preach like Paul, you can be sure 
			that he preached the gospel. When Paul stood before Felix and spoke 
			concerning "the faith in Christ," he "reasoned about righteousness, 
			self-control, and the judgment to come" (Acts 24:24-25). That 
			is gospel preaching, "word of the cross" preaching, "core gospel" 
			preaching and "doctrinal" preaching, one and the same. Gospel and 
			doctrine are mutually inclusive; they are equally related to the 
			sinner's salvation and the saint's edification.
			
			Conclusion
			
			This is not an exhaustive review of the 
			errors made by brother Allen in The Cruciform Church. Such a review 
			would require a line-by-line examination. What has been listed is 
			supplied as a warning that faithful preachers should not be put on 
			the defensive by charges that we are guilty of not preaching enough 
			about the cross of Christ. Some conservative preachers are already 
			parroting this line, inadvertently lending credence to this 
			foolishness. Dangerous consequences are sure to follow when we 
			incorporate unscriptural language in our writing and preaching. It 
			is misleading, to say the least; divisive, at the worst. If we don't 
			want to be identified with these men and go where they are going, 
			let's don't be guilty of duplicating their material. Likewise, it is 
			a warning against falling prey to yet another fallacious distinction 
			between gospel/doctrine, this one called cross/doctrine. 
			Compromisers will never be comfortable under the scrutiny of the 
			whole counsel of God. Let us not give them the edge by defining 
			biblical terminology so as to bring doctrinal preaching into 
			disfavor.
			
			Those who love unity in diversity and 
			who want to broaden the borders of fellowship with error will love 
			this book. It has an air of scholarship and religiosity that will 
			provide just the right touch. We urge all who read it to read 
			carefully, with a Bible at their side "for we are not ignorant of 
			the Devil's devices" (2 Cor. 2:11).
			
			Guardian of Truth - 
			December 
			15, 1994
			 
			
				
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			Other Articles by Tom Roberts
	
	The Cruciform Church - A Study in non-Sequiturs (Part 
	1)
			
			
		
		
		The Gospel-Doctrine 
		Distinction - Part 1
		
	
		The Gospel-Doctrine 
		Distinction - Part 2 
		
		
		The 
		Gospel-Doctrine Distinction - Part 3
		
	What Does it Mean to Preach the Cross?
		
	Extremes Concerning the Church