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Baptist Popery

Oxymoron

Baptist popery should be an oxymoron.  I’ve heard the two terms (Baptist and Pope) put together like this, but the two together are meant as an oxymoron.  Even though it is an oxymoron, does it really happen, that is, Baptist popery?  Because I’ve seen it, I believe it does.

Why is “Baptist popery” an oxymoron?  The attributes of Baptists so contradict characteristics of Roman Catholics that the two seem surely mutually exclusive.  Baptist and pope just can’t coexist.

Contradictions

Baptists believe the Bible is sole infallible authority — not Roman Catholics.  They believe in the priesthood of the believer — not Roman Catholics.  They believe in the autonomy of each church — not Roman Catholics.  Baptists believe that baptism and the Lord’s Table are the only two church ordinances — not Roman Catholics.  They also believe in only two church offices, pastor and deacons — not Roman Catholics.  And finally, Baptists believe in the separation of church and state — not Roman Catholics.

All of the contradictions of the last paragraph say no Baptist popery.  Baptists don’t believe in popes.  They don’t believe in apostolic succession.  The true church isn’t catholic, but it’s local.  So is there really Baptist popery?  Baptists don’t believe in hierarchical church government.  They believe in a congregational form of church government, where a pastor himself is under the authority of the church (1 Timothy 5:19-20).  No Baptist speaks ex cathedra — no new revelation of scripture since the close of Revelation (Jude 1:3).

Wannabe Popes

The Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church says:

The Roman Pontiff, by reason of his office as Vicar of Christ, and as pastor of the entire Church has full, supreme, and universal power over the whole Church, a power which he can always exercise unhindered.

This is more than any Baptist pope could exert.  Yet, how would a Baptist pope operate if he were at least like a Baptist pope, albeit not exactly one — maybe a wannabe pope?  I believe several examples exist of this type of practice among those who call themselves Baptist.  Baptist pastors or churches exert control on the outside over other churches like the pope or the church of Rome.  Not necessarily in this order, here’s what’s toward Baptist popery, if not the actual thing.  It tends toward, has a trajectory toward popery.

Conventions, Associations, or Fellowships

One, the most obvious form of control over churches comes in denominational groups, conventions, associations, or fellowships.  They aren’t mentioned in the Bible, but they’re justified through silence.  Scripture is sufficient and God doesn’t need someone to improve His program.  One of our church members called this “teeing up a one world church,” using a golf analogy.  True success is very often seen in the climb up a denominational ladder.  One Southern Baptist pastor wrote this:

Today’s Southern Baptist Convention has a problem with power. Local churches—which may still exist in name—in fact are being overtaken (a better word might be “consumed”) by the dominating leadership and financial appetite of the larger denomination.

He continued:

Our crisis has its roots in a wide variety of decisions and trends [that] have a special impact on the loss of local church autonomy . . . used as . . . instrument(s) of control.

Kevin Bauder talks about a few of the ways denominational association tends toward popery (without using the word).  About a few of these, he writes:

It is also not unusual for the association to end up controlling the churches. Any time an individual or agency serves as a gatekeeper for pulpit placement, that person or institution gains immense de facto power over churches. . . . An association provides a power structure that unscrupulous individuals can use to promote themselves. It also furnishes a mechanism that these people can employ to exert pressure upon the churches. These political maneuvers may lead to informal but, nevertheless, real interference with the autonomy of local congregations.

Fitting into the convention or association requires finding a lowest common denominator to remain unified.  If God wanted the bigger organization or institution, He would have instituted it.  He didn’t.  They invented themselves. The heads of these organizations do bring in quasi-popery at least.

Parachurch Organizations

Quid Pro Quo

Two, Baptists in most cases today accept the existence, propagation, and power of parachurch organizations.  This would include Baptist publishers, mission boards, colleges, universities, and seminaries, Christian school associations, and camps.  When I was in fundamentalism, the parachurch organization was the pinnacle or summit of Christian acclaim.  One of these trades on exchanges of favor, a kind of quid pro quo.  If the pastor or church supports it, it promotes the pastor or church.  Parachurch organizations create celebrity pastors.

Like the denominational associations or conventions, parachurch organizations are not in the Bible.  Jesus didn’t give them the necessary tools to accomplish His ends.  As a result, they will surely fail at doing what Jesus wants.  The programs of the parachurch organization try to be and stay large to fulfill purpose and meet payroll.  The truth is not usually a factor.  Also like the denominational structure, to keep their relevance, they must settle on a lower common denominator to keep their coalition together.  Also they compromise to stay relevant.

Hurting Churches

Publishers mostly don’t think about what needs publishing, but what will make enough money to fund the publisher.  Mission boards must work with all sorts of different churches with different beliefs and practices.  When a missionary claims that board, he most often associates himself with a larger variety of belief and practice than his church.  This comes back to effect the churches, which in turn weakens the board, and continues a downward slide, feeding off each other.  Everyone of the above parachurch organizations will have similar problems.  One man criticizing the parachurch organization wrote:

Thus, I find it very disturbing when church leaders start to be known more as leaders of a particular parachurch group than as leaders in their churches. This serves to create a confusing image in the mind of the Christian public, whereby the boundary between church and parachurch is eroded, or, worse still, the parachurch is regarded as the place where the real action and excitement take place. This in turn consigns the church to an apparently less important role, and serves to relegate to the level of secondary or even tertiary importance the doctrinal elaboration and distinctives for which individual churches . . . stand. The Christian public comes to regard these ecclesial distinctives as hindrances.

Baptist popes come out of these parachurch organizations, because of their ability to influence and control churches.  They get money from a lot of different sources that enable them to have a more widespread influence that corrupts churches.

Some might say parachurch organizations help churches.  They exist to aid the churches.  Scripture doesn’t support this.  Some short term gain can occur, but over the long term the parachurch organization is a loss to churches.  It’s detrimental overall even if it can point to individual successes.

More to Come

Douglas Wilson: “I Am Not A Separatist”

The Moscow Mood

One landscape of the evangelical internet blew up recently when evangelical reformed (Presbyterian?) Kevin DeYoung, leader in The Gospel Coalition, wrote a scathing article against Douglas Wilson and his Christian enterprise in Moscow, Idaho.  He entitled it:  “On Culture War, Doug Wilson, and the Moscow Mood.”  Now Wilson has answered him with an article at his blog:  “My Rejoinder to Kevin DeYoung.”  Many already have written posts on this highly visible skirmish.

I’m not going to give my assessment on this public conflict.  I have a leaning in this intramural fracas, but I choose to center my attention on Wilson, because of something he wrote in his article:

I am a fundamentalist, in that I believe the fundamentals with all my heart. But I am not a cultural fundamentalist, and I am not a schismatic or separatist.

Wilson says, “I am not a . . . separatist.”  Historically, fundamentalists are at least separatists, unless someone wants to redefine fundamentalism.  Usually in the technical aspects of designation or labelling, removing separation makes Wilson maybe a “conservative evangelical.”  Some would argue with even that because of the Federal Vision issue for Wilson.  To put the doctrine of Federal Vision (FV) in shorthand, someone wrote last week:

The FV holds that all who are baptized are objectively part of the covenant of grace.

Federal Vision and Wilson

It’s thick, but you might read the article in which that sentence occurred to try to understand the issue.  The authors entitled the article:  “On Justification, Doug Wilson, And The Moscow Doctrine.”  The same post reads in the conclusion:

As we witness and lament the waning of Christianity’s influence in American public life, Doug Wilson’s rhetoric has galvanized conservative and Reformed-minded Christians who, at the very least, are hungry for a vision of the future that has a strong Christian influence on the culture. Some have left faithful and orthodox churches for churches more aligned with “the Moscow mood,” while failing to discern the real danger of “the Moscow doctrine,” especially with respect to FV and its erroneous doctrine of justification.

People should ask what the Wilson doctrine of salvation is.  Is it confused?  Are paedobaptists such as Wilson preaching a true gospel?  In a google supplied definition of the belief of paedobaptism, I can’t say WIlson would disagree:

Inherent in this view is the thinking that baptism is only rightly given to those who are regenerate, but that in light of God’s covenant promises, children of Christian parents may be presumed to be regenerate from birth, and thereby worthy recipients of the sign of the covenant.

Wilson says he is a fundamentalist and defines it as believing “the fundamentals,” whatever those may be.  What are “the fundamentals” for someone associating with Federal Vision?  Perhaps Wilson read an accusation of fundamentalism in DeYoung’s post.  The words “fundamentalist” or “separatist” or even “schismatic” do not occur in DeYoung’s article anywhere.

Fundamentalism and Separation

I am pinpointing the language of Wilson, “I am not a . . . separatist,” perhaps Wilson equaling “schismatic” to “separatist.”  True churches, which are true New Testament churches, are separatist.  All true churches are separatist churches.  Yet, Wilson proclaims, he is not a separatist.  Even though he is a fundamentalist, he says, he carves off “cultural fundamentalist.”  These are loaded words that Wilson does not define.  What does it take to be a “cultural fundamentalist.”  Wouldn’t someone be a “cultural fundamentalist” today if he opposed same sex marriage and supported delineated male and female roles.

Wilson argues for the patriarchy even greater or more strict than complementarianism.  This is cultural.  He criticizes complementarians as too soft or squishy.  He defends “toxic masculinity.”  He wrote last month:

God has determined that men should occupy the positions of leadership in each of the basic governments that He has established among men. These governments would be those of our civic life (Is. 3:12), our life together in the church (1 Tim. 2:12), and in the family (1 Cor. 11:3). In the first place, He appointed men to take glad and sacrificial responsibility in these areas, and by men, I mean males. In addition to that, He required the males that He placed in these positions of authority and responsibility to act like men, and not simply males.

The distinction, it seems now, between complementarianism and patriarchy is that the former applies only to marriage and the latter to every institution in the world, as represented by Wilson in the above paragraph.  If Wilson is a fundamentalist, he’s also a cultural fundamentalist.

Sine Qua Non of Fundamentalism

Wilson can’t be a fundamentalist, because separation is a sine qua non of fundamentalism.  Fundamentalists separate over belief and practice.  They separate over fundamentals, whether doctrinal or cultural.  A historian of fundamentalism, Kevin Bauder, covers this in his article:  “The Idea of Fundamentalism.”  You aren’t a fundamentalist unless you separate over your fundamentals.

Fundamentalism is a movement that began in early twentieth century United States with institutional separation.  The Britannica entry on “Christian fundamentalism,” describing Carl McIntyre, says:

He argued that fundamentalists must not only denounce modernist deviations from traditional Christian beliefs but also separate themselves from all heresy and apostasy. This position entailed the condemnation of conservatives who chose to remain in fellowship with more liberal members of their denominations.

Later the article on Christian Fundamentalism restates this foundational characteristic of fundamentalism:

By the 1980s fundamentalists had rebuilt all the institutional structures that had been lost when they separated from the older denominations.

The Bible Requires Separatism

Be Ye Holy

The Bible teaches separatism all the way through.  God separated Adam and Eve from the Garden.  He separated Noah and his family from the rest of the world.  He separated the nation Israel from all the surrounding nations.  Separation verses abound all over the New Testament (2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1, 1 Corinthians 5, 2 Thessalonians 3:6-14).  God by nature is holy and holiness is separation.  God says to His people, “Be ye holy as I am holy.”  He is saying, “Be ye separate as I am separate.”

Wilson defines separatists as both “schismatics” and “cultural fundamentalists,” differentiating from himself.  He gives no explanation for that, apparently thinking everyone reading “just knows already.”  Of the unscriptural belief and practice of Wilson and his institutions in Moscow, Idaho, I reject his lack of separatism, both from the world and from false doctrine and practice.  To explain the catholicity of Douglas Wilson, he advocated for this statement on such:

On this basis we cheerfully recognize the Trinitarian baptisms of Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christians, receive them (and all others who confess this ancient faith) to our celebration of the Eucharist, and warmly welcome them into membership in our congregation.

Catholic or Not Catholic

When he says he is not a separatist, ecclesiastically he means he is catholic.  He doesn’t like what he sees going on, but he’s not going to separate over it.  He’ll sit behind the keyboard and fire away, but that won’t stop him from staying together in a spirit of ecumenism with false doctrine and practice.

I thought Wilson’s statement on fundamentalism and separation to be a good teaching moment.  As many readers know, I do not consider myself a “fundamentalist.”  I without apology say, “I am a separatist.”  God requires separation.  Those who obey scriptural teaching on separation are separatists.  Wilson says, ‘I am not one of those.’

Salvation and Separation

2 Corinthians 6:17-18 say:

17 Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you.

18 And will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.

Jesus said in John 8:44, “Ye are of your Father the devil.”  Someone must leave the one family, Satan’s, to join the new family, something shown in Galatians 3 and 4.  The Lord says, “I will receive you, and will be a Father unto you,” and who does He say this is for?  Those who come out from among them and be ye separate.  Wilson says, “I am not a separatist.”  Okay.  According to scripture, what does that mean for the ultimate outcome for Wilson?

If the Perfectly Preserved Greek New Testament Is the Textus Receptus, Which TR Edition Is It? Pt. 1

The Bible claims that God wrote it word for word.  God also promised to preserve it word for word in the same languages in which He wrote it.  Through history, Christians believed this, even with the reality of copyist errors, what men now call textual variants.   Professing Christian leaders today challenge the assertion of the perfect preservation of scripture.

Kevin Bauder wrote, Only One Bible?, the answer to which is, “Yes.”  Of course there is only one Bible.  His assumption though is, “No, there is more than one.” To Bauder and those like him, the answer to the title of the book is obvious “No.”  In their world, within a certain percentage of variation between them, several Bibles can and do exist.  Bauder wrote:

If they are willing to accept a manuscript or a text that might omit any words (even a single word) from the originals, or that might add any words (even a single word) to the originals, then their whole position is falsified. . . . If preservation does not really have to include every word, then the whole controversy is no more than a debate over percentages.

The “Which TR?” question also deals with Bauder’s point.  Are any of the editions of the TR without error?  If so, which one?  When you say “Scrivener’s” to Bauder and others, you are admitting a type of English trajectory to the perfect Greek text.  When you say, “One of the TR editions is very, very close, but not perfect,” then you surrender on the issue of perfection.  That’s why they ask the question.

The TR never meant one printed edition.  Even Kurt and Barbara Aland the famed textual critics, the “A” in “NA” (Nestles-Aland), wrote (“The Text of the Church?” in Trinity Journal, Fall, 1987, p.131):

[I]t is undisputed that from the 16th to the 18th century orthodoxy’s doctrine of verbal inspiration assumed this Textus Receptus. It was the only Greek text they knew, and they regarded it as the ‘original text.’

He also wrote in his The Text of the New Testament (p. 11):

We can appreciate better the struggle for freedom from the dominance of the Textus Receptus when we remember that in this period it was regarded even to the last detail the inspired and infallible word of God himself.

His wife Barbara writes in her book, The Text of the New Testament (pp. 6-7):

[T]he Textus Receptus remained the basic text and its authority was regarded as canonical. . . . Every theologian of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (and not just the exegetical scholars) worked from an edition of the Greek text of the New Testament which was regarded as the “revealed text.” This idea of verbal inspiration (i. e., of the literal and inerrant inspiration of the text) which the orthodoxy of both Protestant traditions maintained so vigorously, was applied to the Textus Receptus.

I say all that, because Aland accurately does not refer to an edition of the TR, neither does he speak of the TR like it is an edition.  It isn’t.  That is invented language used as a reverse engineering argument by critical text proponents, differing with the honest proposition of Aland, quoted above.  They very often focus on Desiderius Erasmus and his first printed edition of the Greek New Testament.  That’s not how believers viewed what the Van Kleecks call the Standard Sacred Text, others call the Ecclesiastical Text, and still others the Traditional Text.

Neither does Bruce Metzger refer to an edition of the Textus Receptus; only to the Textus Receptus (The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration, 4th ed. [Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005], pp. 106-251):

Having secured . . . preeminence, what came to be called the Textus Receptus of the New Testament resisted for 400 years all scholarly effort to displace it. . . . [The] “Textus Receptus,” or commonly received, standard text . . . makes the boast that “[the reader has] the text now received by all, in which we give nothing changed or corrupted.” . . . [This] form of Greek text . . . succeeded in establishing itself as “the only true text” of the New Testament and was slavishly reprinted in hundreds of subsequent editions. It lies at the basis of the King James Version and of all the principal Protestant translations in the languages of Europe prior to 1881.  [T]he reverence accorded the Textus Receptus. . . [made] attempts to criticize or emend it . . . akin to sacrilege. . . . For almost two centuries . . . almost all of the editors of the New Testament during this period were content to reprint the time-honored . . . Textus Receptus. . . . In the early days of . . . determining textual groupings . . . the manuscript was collated against the Textus Receptus . . . . This procedure made sense to scholars, who understood the Textus Receptus as the original text of the New Testament, for then variations from it would be “agreements in error.”

The Textus Receptus does not refer to a single printed edition of the New Testament.  The language of a received text proceeds from true believers in a time before the printing press in hand copies and then leading to the period of its printing.  Belief in perfection of the preservation of scripture comes from promises of God in His Word.  The Critical Text advocate responds: “Yes, but we see variations between hand written copies and even the printed editions.”  What do they mean by this response?

Critical Text advocates are saying that in light of textual variants, those preservation passages must mean something other than perfect, divine preservation of scripture.  They say that they can’t be used to teach perfect preservation of scripture anymore, like historically true Christians have taught them, because textual variants show that teaching can’t be true.  What divinely inspired or supernatural scripture says is then not the truth, but apparent natural evidence is the truth.  When they talk about the truth, they aren’t talking about scripture.  They are talking about the speculation of textual criticism by textual critics, mostly unbelieving.

Bruce Metzger wrote in The Text of the New Testament (the one quoted above and here in p. 219 and p. 340):  “Textual criticism is not a branch of mathematics, nor indeed an exact science at all. . . . We must acknowledge that we simply do not know what the author originally wrote.”  He and Bart Ehrman say much more like that quotation, but this is why I called modern textual criticism, “speculation.”  Critical text advocates should not call their speculation, “truth.”

You might ask, “So are you going to answer the question in the title of this post?”  Yes.  God preserved the New Testament perfectly in the Textus Receptus, not in one printed edition.  This has always been my position.  Here is how I (and others, like Thomas Ross) would describe this.

First, Scripture promises that God will forever preserve every one of His written words, which are Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek ones (Ps 12:6-7, 33:11, 119:152, 160; Is 30:8, 40:8; 1 Pet 1:23-25; Mt 5:18, 24:35).   God promised the preservation of words, not ink, paper, or particular printed editions.  They were specific words, and not a generalized word.

Second, Scripture promises the general availability of every one of His Words to every generation of believers (Dt 29:29; 30:11-14; Is 34:16, 59:21; Mt 4:4; 5:18-19; 2 Pet 3:2; Jude 17).  Yes, the Words are in heaven, but they are also on earth, available to believers.  This does not guarantee His Words to unbelievers, just to believers.  If the words were not available, those were not His Words.  The Words He preserved could not be unavailable for at least several hundred years, like those in the critical text.

Third, Scripture promises that God would lead His saints into all truth, and that the Word, all of His words, are truth (Jn 16:13, 17:8, 17).   True churches of Christ would receive and guard these words (Mt 28:19-20; Jn 17:8; Acts 8:14, 11:1, 17:11; 1 Thess 2:13; 1 Cor 15:3; 1 Tim 3:15). Believers called the New Testament Greek text, the textus receptus, because the churches received it and then kept it.  Churches of truly converted people with a true gospel and the indwelling Holy Spirit bore testimony to this text as perfect.  Many, many quotes evince this doctrine, including this one by John Owen from His Works:

But my present considerations being not to be extended beyond the concernment of the truth which in the foregoing discourse I have pleaded for, I shall first propose a brief abstract thereof, as to that part of it which seems to be especially concerned, and then lay down what to me appears in its prejudice in the volumes now under debate, not doubting but a fuller account of the whole will by some or other be speedily tendered unto the learned and impartial readers of them. The sum of what I am pleading for, as to the particular head to be vindicated, is, That as the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament were immediately and entirely given out by God himself, his mind being in them represented unto us without the least interveniency of such mediums and ways as were capable of giving change or alteration to the least iota or syllable; so, by his good and merciful providential dispensation, in his love to his word and church, his whole word, as first given out by him, is preserved unto us entire in the original languages; where, shining in its own beauty and lustre (as also in all translations, so far as they faithfully represent the originals), it manifests and evidences unto the consciences of men, without other foreign help or assistance, its divine original and authority.

This reflects the position of the Westminster Confession of Faith and the later London Baptist Confession.  Professor E. D. Morris for decades taught the Westminster Confession at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio. Philip Schaff consulted with him for his Creeds of Christendom. In 1893, Morris wrote for The Evangelist:

As a Professor in a Theological Seminary, it has been my duty to make a special study of the Westminster Confession of Faith, as have I done for twenty years; and I venture to affirm that no one who is qualified to give an opinion on the subject, would dare to risk his reputation on the statement that the Westminster divines ever thought the original manuscripts of the Bible were distinct from the copies in their possession.

Richard Capel represents the position well (Capel’s Remains, London, 1658, pp. 19-43):

[W]e have the Copies in both languages [Hebrew and Greek], which Copies vary not from Primitive writings in any matter which may stumble any. This concernes onely the learned, and they know that by consent of all parties, the most learned on all sides among Christians do shake hands in this, that God by his providence hath preserved them uncorrupt. . . . As God committed the Hebrew text of the Old Testament to the Jewes, and did and doth move their hearts to keep it untainted to this day: So I dare lay it on the same God, that he in his providence is so with the Church of the Gentiles, that they have and do preserve the Greek Text uncorrupt, and clear: As for some scrapes by Transcribers, that comes to no more, than to censure a book to be corrupt, because of some scrapes in the printing, and tis certain, that what mistake is in one print, is corrected in another.

Perfect preservation admitted scribal errors, but because of providential preservation, “what mistake is in one print, is corrected in another.”  Critical text advocates conflate this to textual criticism about which foremost historian Richard Muller wrote on p. 541 of the second volume of his Post Reformation Reformed Dogmatics:

All too much discussion of the Reformers’ methods has attempted to turn them into precursors of the modern critical method, when in fact, the developments of exegesis and hermeneutics in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries both precede and, frequently conflict with (as well as occasionally adumbrate) the methods of the modern era.

Muller wrote on p. 433:

By “original and authentic” text, the Protestant orthodox do not mean the autographa which no one can possess but the apographa in the original tongue which are the source of all versions. The Jews throughout history and the church in the time of Christ regarded the Hebrew of the Old Testament as authentic and for nearly six centuries after Christ, the Greek of the New Testament was viewed as authentic without dispute. It is important to note that the Reformed orthodox insistence on the identification of the Hebrew and Greek texts as alone authentic does not demand direct reference to autographa in those languages; the “original and authentic text” of Scripture means, beyond the autograph copies, the legitimate tradition of Hebrew and Greek apographa.

These biblical presuppositions are true.  For the New Testament, only the textus receptus fulfills those presuppositions.  Those words were preserved in the language in which they were written, koine Greek.  They were the only words available to the generations of believers from 1500 to 1881.  They are also the only words that believers ever agreed, received, and testified were God’s preserved Words in the language in which they were written.

To Be Continued

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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