Editorial
The Triumph of Grace
in the Theology of Edward Fudge (Part 1)
Cecil
Willis
Marion, Indiana
Recently some exceedingly
important discussions have been occurring between some who have been
writing in Truth Magazine and some others who have been writing in the
Gospel Guardian. Brother Gene Frost, a faithful gospel preacher who
lives and works in Louisville, recently called to my attention that
something I had said implied that everyone who wrote for the Gospel
Guardian shared the sentiments of a few who write for the Gospel
Guardian, or of the Editor who, until now, has shown a disposition to
cover up for those errorists on his staff, whose teachings have been
under fire. If anything I have said publicly or in private, orally or in
writing, has been understood to indict every person whose name appears
in the Gospel Guardian, or who has written an article for that paper,
more has been read into my statement than I intended. It would be
helpful, however, if those who do disagree with the error taught by
Edward Fudge and his cohorts would expose that error through the pages
of the Gospel Guardian.
As this article is being
written, a great host of things have been said by Brother William
Wallace in recent issues of the Gospel Guardian, which eventually will
necessitate some reply. After he has had his "say" completely on these
points, some reply will be made. Meanwhile, I want to write some things
which I have contemplated writing for about five years, whether Brother
Wallace agrees that the seeds of this doctrinal defection goes back that
far or not.
Since the early 1950s, I
have read nearly everything that Carl Ketcherside and Leroy Garrett have
written. I have watched their migration from one extreme position to
another, and it is my judgment that their march into ever deeper forms
of liberalism is by no means ended. The premises they have accepted do
not permit them to stop now, unless they are unwilling to accept the
inevitable logical consequences of these premises, and thus choose to
stop in obvious inconsistency. Bluntly stated, they must either give up
their insistence upon immersion as an essential of salvation, or they
must give up their relativistic principles. Which they will sacrifice
remains to be seen.
Philosophical Background
The title for this
article is a "take off" on the title of a book by G. C. Berkouwer, The
Triumph of Grace in the Theology of Karl Barth. The
Ketcherside-Garrett-Fudge heresy correctly has been labeled the
"grace-fellowship" heresy. Recently I made the statement that I have
known this controversy was inevitable among conservative brethren for at
least five years. Brother Wallace scoffed at such an idea. Scores of
brethren across this nation, if they care to do so, can verify that I
have stated privately that this very controversy inevitably was going to
arise among us. I know, God knows, and scores of brethren know that this
apprehension has been expressed for several years.
It is impossible to
separate what a man believes from his presuppositions. One's basic
presuppositions in philosophy are sometimes called his "world-view."
Good books which you might like to secure and read on this point are
James Orr's The Christian View of God and the World, Gordon Clark's A
Christian View of Men and Things, or An Introduction to Christian
Apologetics, written by the late but brilliant Edward J. Carnell.
Incidentally, the last mentioned book is without doubt the best book on
Apologetics I ever read!
One's apriori judgments
color what he thinks in every field. For example, it is easy to trace
existentialist (relativistic) philosophy through math, science,
psychology, philosophy, ethics, theology, or any other discipline one
wishes to contemplate. Just as putting on a pair of colored glasses
would affect the appearance of everything one sees, one's basic
presuppositions affect everything one thinks or believes. And don't you
ever forget it: we are living in an age of philosophic relativism! The
only absolute that remains, in the minds of many, is that of John Dewey:
"Absolutely no Absolutes."
At least until very
recently, the prevailing theology among denominationalial scholastics
has been that half-breed school of thought usually called
"Neo-Orthodoxy." Some think they now see a trend indicating a turn from
Neo-Orthodoxy. But Neo-Orthodoxy has many other names:
Neo-Supernaturalism, Dialectical Theology, The Theology of Paradox, The
Theology of Irrationalism, The Theology of Pessimism, Existential
Theology, The Theology of Crisis, The Theology of Judgment, etc. Most
theological historians would give to Karl Barth the "honor" (?) of being
the Father of Neo-Orthodoxy. The philosophical background for
Neo-Orthodoxy is relativistic Existentialism.
Many of the readers of
this article would question my credentials to write upon the philosophy
of modern religion. When I speak upon Evolution, sometimes unbelieving
"scientists" in an open-forum period challenge my credentials to speak
on a "scientific" subject. I usually turn around the charge. I defy any
scientist to define the "scientific method," and then to tell me what
about his background training qualifies him to speak on the origin of
things. Scientific method involves observation, experimentation, etc.
Now what scientist observed the creation? The origin of life and of the
universe is a metaphysical (i.e. beyond the physical) subject, and this
makes it a philosophical rather than a scientific subject, and it just
so happens that my graduate school major was philosophy.
In this article, and
perhaps in some others to follow, it will be necessary that I speak
somewhat about Existentialism, and about its influence upon modern
denominational theology, and then about the influence of modern
denominational theology upon the thinking of some of our "precocious
neophytes" (as James Adams aptly has named them). Even the peers of some
of these young brethren who are defecting from the faith have recognized
and called attention to their existential views toward revelation. This
view causes them to state that we can never know anything for sure,
since it is possible that we may not exhaustively know a subject. Though
a finite mind may not know all about the Infinite Mind, this does not
imply the human mind cannot know that about God which He has chosen to
reveal through His Son (Matt. 11:27; Jno. 14:9; Col. 2:9; Heb. 1:13).
Jesus explicitly stated that one can know the truth (Jno. 8:32).
One young brother among us has declared that God could not completely
and perfectly reveal His will to man, because God limited Himself to
human language as a vehicle for this revelation, and that human language
is not perfect. Thus God's revelation not perfect. This is
existentialistic relativism!
Paul's
Explanation
When Paul's competence to
speak upon a subject was challenged, he defended his competence, though
he said it made him appear foolish in the eyes of some (See 2 Cor.
12:11-13). For several years, I have wanted to say some things about
Neo-Orthodoxy, and its impact upon some who think themselves to be quite
conservative in their view toward the Bible. Several years ago, Leroy
Garrett said it did not really matter whether one believed in the
Deutero-Isaiah theory or not. Ketcherside advocated a Neo-Orthodox
position toward revelation several years ago when he emphasized the
difference between God's Covenant and the record of God's covenant;
between the New Testament and the record of the Testament. Ketcherside
did not then go on to advance the usual Neo-Orthodox position that the
Testament and the Covenant are perfect, but that the record of the
Testament and Covenant is filled with many imperfections.
I would like now to go
into these matters somewhat. Some may not be much interested in articles
of this kind. But those who really want to understand what is happening
among us, and why, should be very interested in articles like the ones I
propose now to write. Our younger student preachers particularly should
find "relevancy" in these articles.
A college degree
sometimes merely means a person spent a certain number of years at a
school. Even graduate degrees do not necessarily imply one knows what he
is talking about. I have never been one to stand in awe at my brother
who has a Ph.D. degree. Nor have I stood around in envy of him. I have
known some men who did not finish High School who had more education
than some I knew with a Ph.D. degree. This I say that you might keep the
following remarks in proper perspective.
I completed a Master's
Degree, and a few hours beyond that, in Philosophy. It was my good
fortune to get to study under Gordon Clark, who has been considered the
most outstanding "evangelical" philosopher in America. Carl F. H. Henry,
in the first chapter of A Festschrift (The Philosophy of Gordon H.
Clark) said that Clark was "one of the profoundest evangelical
Protestant philosophers of our time," and that Clark "stands out above
all else in the contemporary philosophical milieu, as a champion of a
personal God . . . ." Edward J. Carnell, Paul K. Jewett, Carl F. H.
Henry, and several others are among the outstanding contemporary
philosophers who studied under Clark.
Paradoxically, most of my
other graduate work in philosophy was done under Dr. Walter Sikes
(William E. Wallace's Uncle), who was about as modernistic as Clark was
Calvinistic. Dr. Walter Sikes was married to the sister of Foy E.
Wallace, Jr., and Sikes formerly had been a teacher at Abilene Christian College.
Dr. Sikes could be
described as Neo-Orthodox. When I decided to do my Master's Thesis on "A
Critique of Emil Brunner's Concept of Revelation," Dr. Sikes told me,
"It had better be good!" Emil Brunner was the outstanding Neo-Orthodox
proponent of the revised concept of the Bible, commonly referred to is
Neo-Supernaturalism. As Barth did the definitive Neo-Orthodox work on
the sovereign grace of God, and Reinhold Niebuhr popularized the,
Neo-Orthodox position on sin, Emil Brunner was the most outstanding
Neo-Orthodox advocate of the existential view of revelation. Brunner
wrote about forty books. About twenty of them had been translated into
English, and the others were available only in German. In addition,
Brunner wrote about 300 periodical articles.
After doing my research
and compiling a card file system from which I was prepared to write my
thesis, I wrote about half of the intended paper. My criticisms of the
Neo-Orthodox view of revelation were said to be not "objective enough."
Finally, I decided that if I intended to get a degree from Butler
University, I was going to have to choose a historical subject, and it
was at this point I began work on the paper which later was published as
W. W. Otey: Contender for the Faith.
These facts are cited
simply to let some of those who may think I am completely unfamiliar
with the literature to which I am about to allude know that I at least
have been exposed to the writings of the chief Neo-Orthodox proponents.
I intend to show that there are remarkable similarities between the
concepts of revelation, sin, the church, and the grace of God held by
these leaders of NeoOrthodoxy, and some of those who under the guise of
"orthodoxy" would restructure the church and the beliefs of church
members today.
These last few paragraphs
have not been written asking for any logical "special pleadings," but
merely to ask for a fair hearing. Pernicious error has been, and yet is
being taught, and it must be dealt with. Indeed, healthy doctrine must
be taught, and error exposed.
Truth Magazine, XVIII:10;
pp. 3-5
January 9, 1974
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