failure to build his doctrine of sanctification from Scripture alone is related
to his toleration of weakness on the inspiration of Scripture. Thomas “had a deep sympathy with . . . James
Orr,”[1] to
whom, among a few other theologians, he dedicated his The Holy Spirit of God and of whom he spoke very highly in that
book.[2] Dr. Orr “was unconcerned to defend a literal
interpretation of the early chapters of Genesis, and . . . took the view that
an insistence on biblical inerrancy was actually ‘suicidal.’”[3] Consequently, “as the fundamentalist–modernist controversy broke
out in America[,] [Griffith Thomas] consistently refused to utter the
shibboleths (which he blamed on ‘puritanism’) about historical criticism or
biblical inerrancy or matters of science that were essentials for many.”[4] However, to Griffith Thomas’s credit, even if
he did refuse to take as strong a stand as he should have in some very
important areas of Bibliology, what he does say about the doctrine when he
exposits it[5] is
commendable and consistent with a regenerate state. Credit should, therefore, be given to him
where it is due.
as an Anglican, Griffith Thomas defended baptismal heresy in his comments on
his denomination’s doctrinal creed, the Thirty
Nine Articles:
of regeneration under five aspects; (a) Incorporation with the Church; (b)
ratification of the promise of remission; (c) ratification of the promise of
adoption; (d) strengthening of faith; (e) increase of grace. . . . Baptism
introduces us into a new and special relation to Christ. It provides and
guarantees a spiritual change in the condition of the recipient[.] . . . The
words “new birth” suggest that Baptism introduced us into a new relation and
new circumstances with the assurance of new power. . . . [T]he Reformers in
their own books and also in the Formularies for which they are responsible, did
not intend to condemn all doctrines of Baptismal Regeneration . . . in the
theology of the Reformation the controversy did not turn on the question
whether there was or was not a true doctrine of Baptismal Regeneration, for the
Reformers never hesitated to admit that Baptism is the Sacrament of
Regeneration.[6]
the Anglican Baptismal Service, which declares:
“Seeing now that this child is regenerate” after the administration of
the “sacrament.” He likewise defends the
Anglican Catechism, in which the catechumen speaks of: “My Baptism, wherein I was made a member of
Christ.” However, Griffith Thomas, as a
low-church Anglican, seeks to minimize and explain away such terrible
sacramental heresies in his denomination in a way that is, one hopes,
consistent with his own genuine new birth, making arguments similar to the sort
of minimalization and confusion of language that Bishop Handley Moule employed
in his attempts to reconcile Anglican liturgy and the Pauline gospel of
justification by faith alone.
surprisingly, Griffith Thomas was also a continuationist, although, just as his
Keswick theology was more moderate and sane than that of many of his fellows,
so his continuationism, although still a rejection of Scriptural cessationism,
was of a more moderate form than that of the Keswick trajectory represented by
the Christian and Missionary Alliance and Pentecostalism. Thomas wrote the introduction to R. V.
Bingham’s book The Bible and the Body,[7]
and affirmed that Bingham’s position was “the true position” which Thomas was glad
to “cal[l] attention to.”[8] Bingham, the founder of “Canadian Keswick,”[9]
while making a great number of excellent points against more radical
continuationism, taught in The Bible and
the Body that the sign gifts have not ceased, but that on “most of the
foreign fields”—Bingham was the founder of the Sudan Interior Mission—the
“repetition of the signs” had appeared, so that “[m]issionaries could duplicate
almost every scene in the Acts of the Apostles.” God “gives the signs” today.[10] To describe the first century as “the age of
miracles” which is now “past” is an error.[11] In “this dispensation” God still gives “the
gift of healing,”[12]
and in answering the question about whether the signs of the book of Acts are
for today, Bingham answers that, in some “conditions, yes.”[13] Griffith Thomas and Bingham are also far too
generous to proponents of more radical continuationist error. Thomas “plead[s], as Mr. Bingham does, for
liberty, and [is] . . . ready to give it to those who believe” in the exact
errors on “Healing” that are very effectively refuted in his book—he will not
separate from those who promulgate errors on healing, but will speak of those
in “the healing cults” as “our friends” who have “honoured and saintly
leaders.”[14]
as Griffith Thomas defended the errors of Keswick sanctification, although in a
more cool-headed way than many of his Keswick contemporaries, so he likewise
defended Keswick continuationism or anti-cessationism, although likewise in a
more cool-headed way than many. He also
followed the traditional Keswick refusal to separate from the more radical
ideas on sanctification and sign gifts of many of his fellow promulgators of
the Keswick theology. His defense of
Keswick against B. B. Warfield, while superior to McQuilkin’s promulgation of
Warfield’s mythological posthumous recantation, still remains
fundamentally a failure to those who hold consistently to sola Scriptura. Keswick’s
apologists have both failed to provide solid exegetical answers to critics and
failed to demonstrate that Keswick critics generally misunderstand or
misrepresent the Higher Life system.
While Keswick critics in the world of scholarship are far from
infallible, no convincing evidence exists that they routinely misrepresent Higher
Life theology.
Toronto, Canada: Evangelical
Publishers, 1921 (1st ed.); 4th ed. 1952.
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