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The Watershed Moment in the Decline of the American Church: Distinction Between the Sexes

The Beginning of the Bible

When you open your Bible to the first chapter of Genesis, you read in verse 27:

So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.

As if that mattered, God repeats this in Genesis 5:1-2:

1 This is the book of the generations of Adam. In the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him; 2 Male and female created he them; and blessed them, and called their name Adam, in the day when they were created.

Male and female.  That’s it.  God created male and female, two different sexes.  When I read scripture I notice also two different genders for mankind, communicated by he, him, his and she, her, and hers.  “It” never refers to a member of mankind, only the masculine or feminine genders.

God Designed

Furthermore, God designed distinction between the sexes.  He gave each a distinct kind or type of body and emotional make-up.  God also differentiated a separate, distinct role for each sex.  Each role complements the other.  According to this truth, God forbade same sex coital activity and marriage.

God also mandated the preservation or keeping of the designed distinctions between male and female.  He banned or outlawed masculinity for women and effeminacy for men.  God never rescinded any of that.  He repeated the regulation in both the Old and New Testaments.  God also instructed on it with varied statements intended for compliant application.

The fall of mankind in Genesis 3 resulted from abrogation of the male and female roles.  The curse of sin on mankind then instructs also in Genesis 3 concerning the future disorientation of sexual roles.  God prohibits men and women from changing or exchanging roles.  He also requires them to preserve clear symbols or marks of distinction in appearance.

Rebellion

The rebellion against God starts with the man abrogating headship.  It continues with the woman usurping male authority.  Mankind perverts the God designed and created hierarchy.

Mankind follows role rebellion with role and then sex confusion.  A person becomes his sex at conception.  God ordains parents to train the conceived and then born male to continue a man in every way; likewise the female to be a woman in all manners.

The animus between male and female in Genesis 3 continues.  People must support God’s design.  They must also oppose all manner of role confusion.  God especially demands this of true churches.

Long ago churches began relinquishing their responsibility to distinguish between sexes.  The world started this decline, but churches followed.  Churches accommodate role rebellion now in numbers of ways.  Some churches take some stand against the decline, but nearly every church capitulates in some manner out of fear, convenience, or pragmatism.

Rick Warren and Southern Baptist Convention

In a very obvious, public way, the Southern Baptist Convention battles right now who can lead their churches.  Will they be men or men and women?  So-called “America’s pastor,” Rick Warren, fights for the egalitarian, role confusion in the Convention.  He threatens the departure of thousands of “purpose-driven” churches from the convention over the issue.

Transgenderism, surgical sex changes, and gender neutral bathrooms make the headlines.  This ship started sailing long ago.  Conservative evangelical John MacArthur preached a standard exposition of Ephesian 5 on the two distinct marriage roles.  Women in mass rose and left the auditorium in protest.

Sixty to seventy years ago, every woman wore a dress or skirt in church, let alone at home.  Of course, every man wore pants.  This was (and still is) the only symbol of sexual distinction.  It’s why transgender “women” wear dresses like Kaitlyn Jenner.  It’s also why transgender “men” wear short hair and pants.

Anecdotal

In the first month after my wife and I moved to Indiana, I went to a junior boys basketball game at the elementary school.  A blue jean wearing woman coached the boys team.  She stomped and yelled like Bobby Knight on the sideline.  No one flinched at her antics.  Just another day in rural, red-state Indiana.  This, my friends, is the new normal.

The next night my wife and I went to an ice cream place and started up a conversation with some professing Christians there.  We continued in pleasant interaction.  Then I told the story of the junior boys game, its four overtimes, ending with sudden death.  I described the coach something like in the previous paragraph. They met my story with no response.  They went mute silent with pained expressions on their faces.  After an awkward moment of hearing the crickets in the background and feet shuffling, subject changed.

For the Future of Churches and America

Maybe at one time in the United States, leadership fires a woman for behaving like a man.  Today, leadership, maybe even female leadership, fires a man for criticizing the woman.  This fits into the contemporary battle of first amendment rights.  According to the Declaration of Independence, these inalienable rights come from God.  The country banishes God from public conversation.  Government and society in general prevent speech from and about God.

If you visit a business promoting transgenderism today, you could say the following.  “I will be back when you stop pushing your left wing religion on me.”  It is a very dogmatic religion established by the state today.

Churches will die with concession on sexual distinction.  The Democrats famously booed including the name of God in their political platform in 2012.  Will churches boo sexual distinction?  Have we reached a moment when this is even an unwelcome subject matter?

To stop American decline, judgment must begin in the house of God.  Churches must stand on the designed distinctions between male and female.  They may say they support supernaturalism and young earth creationism.  Will they worship and serve the creature rather than the Creator?  If creation means anything in a practical way, it means male and female created He them.

Rick Warren and Evangelical Agnosticism About or Over the Biblical Doctrine of Separation, pt. 2

Part One

Rick Warren and Saddleback Church

Expelled by the SBC

February 21 of this year (2023) the Southern Baptist Convention expelled Saddleback Church.  Saddleback was the church Rick Warren started and pastored in Southern California.  The SBC ejected Saddleback for having a woman pastor.  Rick Warren decided he was wrong about woman pastors.  The Bible actually did allow it.

Ejection from the SBC is a kind of separation.  No doubt.  Rick Warren, it seems, wants to fight it.  I read an article this week that chronicled a bit of an account in an interview of Warren.

The author of the article learned much from SBC training for a state contracted prison chaplaincy, and he thinks Warren will be back.  Part of the reason, it seems, is that he’s already seen that the SBC has many women pastors.  Warren maybe thinks the SBC will take back Saddleback because of the 6,000 Purpose-Driven churches in the Convention.  He says these churches don’t need the SBC, but he wants to influence the SBC.

Rick Warren in Christianity Today

Former SBC leader and chief editor of Christianity Today, Russell Moore, interviewed Warren March 8, 2023.  Even though I don’t like Warren’s belief and practice,  his answers to Moore reveal inconsistencies for the SBC.  Apparently, the SBC avoided dealing with some abuse of women with a reference to autonomy in churches.  Warren claims the SBC didn’t give Saddleback autonomy in their decision for female pastors.  I too have seen autonomy as a regular tool for disobedience.  It becomes a convenient excuse for pastors doing what they like the most.

I read Rick Warren’s Purpose Driven Church book right when he published it.  I knew nothing of him and started the read with a positive outlook.  That assessment became negative when I started reading his rank pragmatism.  I think Rick Warren has done as much damage to churches as anyone in the history of the church.  Still, his treatment of the SBC brings out a good learning moment about the biblical doctrine of separation.

Ecclesiastical Separation

Assessment of Separation

Ecclesiastical separation means a church separates from another church or even other non-church institutions.  The SBC has no biblical authority to separate.  If many churches in the SBC continue with many varied types of unscriptural belief and behavior, separation from Saddleback looks political in some way.  It also exposes the corruption of an unbiblical Convention system.

I’m taking my analysis mainly from the article by C. D. Cauthorne, Jr. at SharperIron.  Warren as reported by Cauthorne supports some kind of separation without addressing ecclesiastical separation.  He quotes not one of a multitude of separation verses from scripture and yet says this:

We should be able to expel people over sin, racism, sexual abuse, other sexual sins, things like that.

Who is We?

Rightly practiced, I don’t disagree with Warren.  I would start, however, by asking, “Who is “we”?”  We expel.  Who can expel people.  We seems to be members of the SBC.  Warren thinks the SBC should expel other members and other churches over certain wrong behavior.  I would call what Warren says next, a “riff.”  He’s talking from the seat of his pants and making aggressive, false statements.  He is inventing material right on the spot really in a typical manner a postmodern world might do that.

This is the same old battle that’s been going on for 100 years in the SBC between conservative Baptists and fundamental Baptists… . Today, a fundamentalist means you’ve stopped listening… . That’s the number one mark of it… . We have to approach Scripture humbly saying I could be wrong. You’ll never hear a Fundamentalist say, “I could be wrong.” A conservative Baptist believes in the inerrancy of Scripture, a fundamentalist Baptist believes in the inerrancy of their interpretation.

Conservative Baptists and Fundamental Baptists?

Has there been a battle for a 100 years between conservative Baptists and fundamental Baptists?  Who are conservative Baptists?  Warren seems to include himself with conservative Baptists.  Who are fundamental Baptists, and especially in the Southern Baptist Convention?  Warren seems to think he will get some traction with an audience by weaponizing the term “fundamentalist.”  He says it means, “You’ve stopped listening.”

Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism

Warren and Fundamentalism

People who actually will call themselves fundamentalists would not use Rick Warren’s ad hominem definition.  Maybe you’re laughing as you read his definition.  It is funny what someone can say and get away with it in a mainstream interview.  Fundamentalists, Warren says, never say, “I could be wrong.”  “A fundamental Baptist believes in the inerrancy of their (sic) interpretation.”  The latter is just a rhetorical turn of phrase meant as combative.  He’s unhappy, but the female role or female pastor issue isn’t just an interpretational one.  In addition, all doctrinal issues relate to interpretation of scripture.

As coarse as Warren is in his take, he manifests a problem with separation in evangelicalism.  They have almost no established, systematic or biblical doctrine of separation upon which to operate.  Scripture says a lot on separation, but since they never include anything about separation in anything they write, no one knows what to do.

Sounding like a Fundamentalist

Warren himself sounds like a fundamentalist.  I understand fundamentalism.  I was a fundamentalist for at least the first 35 years of my life. Warren advocates for separation, but like all fundamentalists, he argues over the standard used.  The Bible is not the standard.  With some kind of social norm as the standard, the arguments about what standard to use will never cease, like they never did in fundamentalism.  These debates occur and occurred until the now gradual disappearance of fundamentalism as a movement.

A good question might also be, what makes someone conservative?  That isn’t established either, as much as Warren floats the term.  He uses “inerrancy” as an ambiguous standard as well as other terms used in an equally ambiguous way.  Warren is working at excluding the belief in male only in the office of pastor.  He says scripture convinced him.  He thinks the SBC should, as it has done in other areas, allow this diversity of “interpretation.”  It’s just a different interpretation, perhaps like the “sons of God” in Genesis 6 and the like.  Who separates over interpretations?

Biblical Separation

Like a Fundamentalist

Maybe a more preliminary question is, “Who separates?”  Or furthermore, “What is biblical separation?”  Evangelicals can’t give a good answer on separation because they do not preach separation.  They do not teach separation.  They are not separatists.  Separation, when they practice it, is not about God.  It is not about obedience to scripture.

Warren uses all sorts of strategies against the SBC in his interview that sound just like what a fundamentalist might do.  He wants to change the criteria for separation and he applies pressure in political ways.  Warren pulls the race card and says that “black churches” ordain women.  He concludes, “The SBC is holding up a sign saying:  All Black churches, look elsewhere.  You’re not wanted here.”  I wonder what black pastors think about Warren’s statement, who don’t endorse female pastors.  Is the idea of “Black churches” itself a kind of racism?  All “Black churches”? Warren lumps all into one category of groupthink.  Not one church peels off the lockstep, uniform whole according to the Warren assessment.

A tell-tale moment, very fundamentalist of him, Warren says, “This issue, the women’s role, it’s not a primary issue because it doesn’t have to do with salvation.  It is a secondary issue.”  This way of talking is inherently fundamentalist.  Warren is saying that someone separates on “primary issues.”  These are what?  Fundamentals.

John MacArthur

John MacArthur, when he attempted to answer in the Q and A in the matter of separation, talks the same way as Warren here.  He’s attempted to categorize what is primary and what is secondary.  MacArthur says, the woman’s role is a primary issue.  He says, infant sprinkling, that isn’t a primary issue.  That’s secondary, and you don’t separate over that.

MacArthur also echoes Warren or Warren echoes MacArthur with the statement, “It doesn’t have to do with salvation.”  MacArthur called this someone who is in the kingdom of God.  You’ve got to work with people who are in the kingdom of God.  Are these women pastors in the kingdom of God?  Are they saved?  I think you can see how that this kind of arbitrary, unscriptural standard will not settle issues of separation.

First, do we separate?  Second, what is the basis of separation?  In part three I want to go through MacArthur’s Q and A answer to show how he falls short.  We know that Rick Warren falls short, but he’s talking the same way as MacArthur about separation.

More to Come

Four Views On the Spectrum of Evangelicalism: A Book Review

I recently listened on Audible through the book Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism, contributors Kevin Bauder, R. Albert Mohler Jr., John G. Stackhouse Jr., and Roger E. Olson, series editor Stanley N. Gundry, gen eds. Andrew David Naselli & Collin Hansen (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2011).  The four views presented are:

Fundamentalism: Kevin Bauder

Confessional Evangelicalism, R. Albert Mohler, Jr.

Generic Evangelicalism, John G. Stackhouse, Jr.

Postconservative Evangelicalism, Roger E. Olson

When I listen through a book on Audible I usually listen through twice, since it is easier to miss things when listening to a book than it is when reading one.

For most of the book, I was cheering for Kevin Bauder, for reasons which will be clear below.

Let the Wolves In!

Roger Olson’s View

wolves eating sheep Christianity false teachers true false sin

Beginning with the bad people who are fine letting the wolves in: Roger Olson argues that “inerrancy cannot be regarded as necessary to being authentically evangelical.  It is what theologians call adiaphora–a nonessential belief” (pg. 165). What is more, “open theists [are] not heretical” (pg. 185). Evangelicals do not need to believe in penal substitution: “there is no single evangelical theory of the atonement. While the penal substitution theory (that Christ bore the punishment for sins in the place of sinners) may be normal, it could hardly be said to be normative” (pg. 183).  However, fundamentalism is “orthodoxy gone cultic” (pg. 67).  Deny Christ died in your place, think God doesn’t know the future perfectly, and think the Bible is full of errors? No problem. Let a Oneness Pentecostal, anti-Trinitarian “church” in to the National Association of Evangelicals (pg. 178)? Great!  Be a fundamentalist?  Your are cultic.

Summary: While Christ says His sheep hear His voice, and Scripture unambiguously teaches its infallible and inerrant inspiration (2 Timothy 3:16; 2 Peter 1:16-21) as the Word of the God who cannot lie, and penal substitution is at the heart of the gospel, Dr. Olson thinks one can deny these things and not only be a Christian but be an evangelical.  Let in the heretics and the wolves!

Let Some of the Wolves In!

John Stackhouse’s View

angry wolf snarling teeth showing false teachers Christianity true false

John G. Stackhouse, Jr. is only slightly more conservative than Dr. Olson.  For Dr. Stackhouse, “open theists are, to my knowledge, genuine evangelicals” (pg. 132).  No! But at least anti-Trinitarian Oneness Pentecostals who have a false god, a false gospel, and are going to hell are not evangelicals (pg. 204).  Does something so obvious even deserve a “Yay”?

What about penal substitution? “substitutionary atonement is a nonnegotiable part of the Christian understanding of salvation, and evangelicals do well to keep teaching it clearly and enthusiastically” (pg. 136).  One cheer for Dr. Stackhouse.  But then he goes on:

But suppose somebody doesn’t teach it? Does that make him or her not an evangelical? According to the definition I have been using, such a person might well still be an evangelical. Indeed, the discussion in this section takes for granted that some (genuine) evangelicals are uneasy about substitutionary atonement, and a few even hostile to that idea. But they remain evangelicals nonetheless: still putting Christ and the cross in the center, still drawing from Scripture and testing everything by it, still concerned for sound and thorough conversion, still active in working with God in his mission, and still cooperating with evangelicals of other stripes. Evangelicals who diminish or dismiss substitutionary atonement seem to me to be in the same camp as my evangelical brothers and sisters who espouse open theism: truly evangelicals, and truly wrong about something important. (pgs. 136-137)

So the one cheer quickly is replaced by gasps for air and a shocked silence, as the heretics and the wolves come right back in again.  Dr. Bauder does a good job responding to and demolishing these justifications of apostasy and false religion.

Write Thoughtful Essays Showing that the Wolves Need Critique, but

Let the World and the Flesh In and Don’t Be A Fundamentalist Separatist:

Al Mohler’s View

mega church rocking out smoke electrical guitars hands in air worldly fleshly devilish

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. calls his view “Confessional Evangelicalism,” although he never cites any Baptist or any other confession of faith in his essay.  He thinks you do actually need to believe Christ died in your place, open theism is unacceptable, and an inerrant Bible is something worth standing for (1.5 cheers for Dr. Mohler, led by very immodestly dressed Southern Baptist cheerleaders who know that God made them male and female, not trans). However, Dr. Mohler does not believe in anything close to a Biblical doctrine of ecclesiastical separation.  His Southern Baptist denomination is full of leaven that is corrupting the whole lump.  His ecclesiastical polity is like the Biden administration on the USA’s southern border–claiming that there are a few barriers that keep out people who are trying to creep in unawares while millions of illegals come pouring in with a nod and a wink.

Dr. Bauder makes some legitimate criticisms of Dr. Mohler, while also being much more cozy with him than John the Baptist or the Apostles would have been. Dr. Bauder says that Mohler is “doing a good work, and that work would be hindered if I were to lend credibility to the accusation that he is a fundamentalist” (pg. 97).  That is Bauder’s view of the false worship, the huge number of unregenerate church members, the spiritual deadness, the doctrinal confusion, and the gross disobedience in the Southern Baptist Convention. Hurray?  Dr. Bauder’s discussion is not how the first century churches would have worked with disboedient brethren (2 Thessalonians 3:6, 14).

Separate From the Wolves, but Not From Disobedient Sheep:

Kevin Bauder’s “Mainstream Fundamentalist” View

Modern Bible versions NIV NASB Living REB Message Good News NJB KJV

Kevin Bauder is a self-identified “historic fundamentalist.”  (But what if there never was a unified “historic fundamentalism”?)  He is the only one of the four contributors who actually thinks that ecclesiastical separation needs to take place.  So two cheers for Dr. Bauder!  Bauder argues:  “the gospel is the essential ground of all genuinely Christian unity. Where the gospel is denied, no such unity exists” (pg. 23).  Therefore, “Profession of the gospel is the minimum requirement for visible Christian fellowship. The gospel is the boundary of Christian fellowship” (pg. 25).  Bauder does a good job showing that people must separate from those who deny the gospel, or those who fellowship with those who deny the gospel.  Two more cheers for Bauder.

However, Bauder warns about what he calls “hyper-fundamentalism,” which is actually Biblically consistent separatism (and which gets no voice to defend itself in this book).  He has strong words for the “hyper-fundamentalists”–stronger than the way he voices his disagreements with Mohler:

One version of fundamentalism goes well beyond the idea that I summarized earlier in this essay. It could be called hyper-fundamentalism. Hyper-fundamentalism exists in a variety of forms. … [H]yper-fundamentalists sometimes adopt a militant stance regarding some extrabiblical or even antibiblical teaching. For example, many professing fundamentalists are committed to a theory of textual preservation and biblical translation that leaves the King James Version as the only acceptable English Bible. When individuals become militant over such nonbiblical teachings, they cross the line into hyper-fundamentalism. … [H]yper-fundamentalists understand separation in terms of guilt by association. To associate with someone who holds any error constitutes an endorsement of that error. Persons who hold error are objects of separation, and so are persons who associate with them. … [H]yper-fundamentalists sometimes turn nonessentials into tests of fundamentalism. For example, some hyper-fundamentalists assume that only Baptists should be recognized as fundamentalists. Others make the same assumption about dispensationalists, defining covenant theologians out of fundamentalism. Others elevate extrabiblical personal practices. One’s fundamentalist standing may be judged by such criteria as hair length, musical preferences, and whether one allows women to wear trousers. … Hyper-fundamentalism takes many forms, including some that I have not listed. Nevertheless, these are the forms that are most frequently encountered. When a version of fundamentalism bears one or more of these marks, it should be viewed as hyper-fundamentalist. It is worth noting that several of these marks can also be found in other versions of evangelicalism.

Hyper-fundamentalism is not fundamentalism. It is as a parasite on the fundamentalist movement. … Mainstream fundamentalists find themselves in a changing situation. One factor is that what was once the mainstream may no longer be the majority within self-identified fundamentalism. A growing proportion is composed of hyper-fundamentalists, who add something to the gospel as the boundary of minimal Christian fellowship. If the idea of fundamentalism is correct, then this error is as bad as dethroning the gospel from its position as the boundary.

Another factor is that some evangelicals have implemented aspects of the idea of fundamentalism, perhaps without realizing it. For example, both Wayne Grudem and Albert Mohler (among others) have authored essays that reverberate with fundamentalist ideas. More than that, they and other conservative evangelicals have put their ideas into action, seeking doctrinal boundaries in the Evangelical Theological Society and purging Southern Baptist institutions.

Mainstream fundamentalists are coming to the conclusion that they must distance themselves from hyper-fundamentalists, and they are displaying a new openness to conversation and even some cooperation with conservative evangelicals. Younger fundamentalists in particular are sensitive to the inconsistency of limiting fellowship to their left but not to their right. (pgs. 43-45)

By Bauder’s definition, the first century churches would have been “hyper-fundamentalist” parasites.  (Note that Bauder also makes claims such as:  “Some hyper-fundamentalists view education as detrimental to spiritual well-being” [pg. 44].  There is probably a guy named John somewhere in a “hyper-fundamentalist” church that thinks education is a sin, and there is also probably a lady named Mary in a neo-evangelical church who thinks the same thing, and a big burly fellow named Mat in a post-conservative church who agrees with them, but nothing further about these sorts of claims by Bauder needs further comment.  So we return to something more serious.)  Do you separate over more than just the gospel?  Do you, for example, separate over men who refuse to work and care for their families (2 Thess 3:6-14)?  You are a parasite, just as bad, if not worse, than people who do not separate at all.  Do you separate over false worship (“musical styles” to Bauder), since God burned people up for offering Him strange fire (Lev 10:1ff)?  You are bad–very, very bad.  Let the strange fire right in to the New Testament holy of holies (1 Corinthians 3:16-17)!–even though God says He will “destroy” those who do such a wicked thing.  Do you take a stand for the perfect preservation of Scripture–as did men like George S. Bishop, one of the contributors to The Fundamentals (see, e. g., George S. Bishop, The Fundamentals: “The Testimony of the Scriptures to Themselves,” vol. 2:4 [Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2005], 80ff.)? You King James Only parasite!  Do you seek to follow the Apostle Paul and the godly preacher Timothy, and allow “no other doctrine” in the church–not just “no other gospel,” but “no other doctrine” (1 Timothy 1:3)?  Do you repudiate Dr. Bauder’s schema of levels of fellowship to seek what Scripture defines as unity: “that ye all speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions among you; but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment” (1 Corinthians 1:10)?  You are bad–very, very bad.  You should be rejected, and we should join hands, instead, with evangelicals like Mohler who write essays that we “reverberate” with while they work in a Southern Baptist Convention teeming with unregenerate preachers and church members which almost never obeys Matthew 18:15-20 and practices church discipline.  If you think Scripture is not kidding when it says men with long hair or women with short hair is a “shame” (1 Corinthians 11:1-16), or you do not want the women in your church to be an “abomination” (Deuteronomy 22:5) by wearing men’s clothing like pants, then you are certainly, certainly beyond the pale.  Corruptions in our culture do not matter-let them into what should be Christ’s pure bride! Everyone knows that the loving thing to do is to allow half the congregation to be an abomination so that they can fit in with our worldly, hell-bound culture.

Dr. Bauder at least says one should separate over the gospel, and he does a good job proving that Scripture requires churches to do that.  He has numbers of effective critiques of positions to his left.  He clearly has studied history and is a thinker.  But he does not present a Biblical case for consistent separatism-very possibly because consistent ecclesiastical separation is only possible when one rejects universal “church” ecclesiology for local-only or Landmark Baptist ecclesiology, and views the local assembly as the locus for organizational unity, while Bauder believes in a universal “church” and must somehow accomodate Scripture’s commands for unity in the body of Christ to that non-extant entity.  As the book A Pure Church: A Biblical Theology of Ecclesiastical Separation demonstrates, churches must separate from all unrepentant and continuing disobedience, not just separate over the gospel.  Dr. Bauder’s view is insufficient.  Furthermore, his critique of what he labels “hyper-fundamentalism” is inconsistent.  If the “hyper-fundamentalists” do things like separate too much and take stands for pure worship, are they thereby denying the gospel?  If not, why does Bauder think they should be repudiated and separated from?

One other important point: some of those who would repudiate Dr. Bauder’s view as too weak are themselves to his left, not his right.  For example, the King James Bible Research Council and the Dean Burgon Society, prominent King James Only advocacy organizations that would claim to be militant fundamentalists, are willing to fellowship with anti-repentance, anti-Lordship, anti-Christ (for does not “Christ” mean “the Messiah, the King, the Lord”?) advocates of heresy on the gospel as advocated by Jack Hyles, Curtis Hudson and the Sword of the Lord, and the so-called “free grace” movement of Zane Hodges.  Fundamentalist schools that stand for gender-distinction and conservative worship, such as Baptist College of Ministry in Menomonee Falls, WI, are willing to fellowship with people who believe the truth on repentance and the gospel as well as with anti-repentance heretics at Hyles Anderson College and First Baptist (?) Church (?) of Hammond, Indiana like John Wilkerson.  If you think Kevin Bauder’s Central Baptist Seminary is too weak, but you yourself do not separate even over the gospel, but tolerate false views of repentance or other heresies on the gospel that Paul would not have tolerated for one hour (Galatians 1:6-9, 2:5), you need to reconsider your position.

Take a stand–follow God.  Allow “no other doctrine” (1 Timothy 1:3). Separate not just on the gospel, but from all unfruitful works of darkness (Ephesians 5:11).  You may be excluded from the book Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism, with its more liberal contributors viewing you as “cultic” and the most conservative contributor viewing you as a “parasite” and a “hyper-fundamentalist,” but that is fine-God your adopted Father, Christ your gracious Redeemer, and the blessed Holy Spirit, who has made your body and your congregation into His holy temple, will be pleased.  The needy sheep in your flock who had a faithful pastor will embrace you and thank you as they shine like the sun in the coming glorious kingdom, as you led them to faithfulness to Christ and a full reward, instead of compromise.  If Christ does not return first, your church may, by God’s grace, continue to pass on the truth and to multiply other true churches for centuries, instead of falling into apostasy because of a sinful failure to consistently practice Biblical separation.

Get off the spectrum of evangelicalism entirely and follow Scripture alone for the glory of God alone in a separatist, Bible-believing and practicing Baptist church.  You will be opposed now, but God will be glorified, and it will be worth it all, when we see Jesus.

TDR

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Trail of Blood and Landmarkism

Part One

Men use the terms “Trail of Blood” and “Landmarkism” as a kind of mockery, almost never with evidence.  They use them in the same manner as calling someone a “Flat Earther.”  If I said I was “Trail of Blood” and “Landmark,” what would I mean?  Should I embrace those terms in light of potential derision?

Trail of Blood

“Trail of Blood” refers to a booklet written by James Milton Carroll in 1931.  Carroll did not originate the words “trail of blood” as referring to the persecution of churches.  Others before used “trail of blood” to describe the ongoing record of atrocities of Roman Catholicism through the centuries in its opposition to the truth.  I like the metaphor of Carroll, which is saying that you can detect true churches in the historical record through findings of state church persecution.

Carroll would say that the trail of blood started with the Lord Jesus Christ and that suffering marks the trajectory of true churches.  I use this exact language all the time, “There have always been true churches separate from the state church.”  I also ask this question, “Do you believe the truth was preserved in and through Roman Catholicism?”  Men find it difficult to answer “yes” to that question.  If they answer, “No,” then they essentially take a Trail of Blood position.  I say, “Well, then we take the same position, don’t we?”

Whitsitt Controversy and English Separatism

Opposition to the Trail of Blood started with a liberal president of the Southern Baptist Convention, William Whitsitt (read here, here, here, and here).  The work of Whitsitt is less famous than Carroll’s Trail of Blood, but if someone does not accept the Trail of Blood, his other option is called, “English Separatism.”  Can we mock someone as “English Separatist”?  The Trail of Blood position predates the English Separatist one.  If someone rejects Trail of Blood, he is left with the Roman Catholic position on church perpetuity or succession.  He denies the promise of Jesus, “the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18).

Whitsitt took from his European training a modernistic view of truth.  He wrote and said that if it does not have primary source historical evidence, it isn’t true.  From this, Whitsitt said that the earliest Baptist churches trace from 1610 in England.

A split occurred in the Southern Baptist Convention over Whitsitt.  The Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary under the presidency of B. H. Carroll started in a major way because of the Whitsitt controversy.  Most Southern Baptists then distinguished themselves from Protestants.  Carroll’s brother wrote Trail of Blood.

The Application of Modernistic Historicism

Did you know a historical gap exists between the completion of the New Testament and the doctrine of justification?  With that historical position, justification did not exist until after the Protestant Reformation.  No primary source evidence exists for the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem.  I’ve been to Bethlehem in the Palestinian West Bank area, and the best historical evidence outside of scripture for Jesus’ birth is secondary and vague.  It starts around 325 with Constantine’s mother Helena visiting there.

The mockery designated for Trail of Blood reminds me of the mockery by scientists of a God Hypothesis and intelligent design.  Trail of Blood is true, but it is institutionally inconvenient.  Intelligent design or a God Hypothesis puts people out of business.  Trail of Blood is a strict ecclesiological position that undermines free-floating free agents, who function outside of church authority, like for instance, Alpha and Omega ministries.  “Ministries” function outside of a church, not something we read in the Bible, and cross denominational lines on a regular basis.

Landmarkism

The attack on Landmarkism dovetails with the one on Trail of Blood.  Landmarkism did not originate local-only ecclesiology.  The Landmark movement began in the Southern Baptist Convention because of an ecumenical drift in the Convention.  Modernism began affecting the Convention.  Compromise grew.  Baptist churches began allowing Presbyterians in their pulpit and accepted their “baptism” for transfer of church membership.  The Landmarkers stood against this.

The Landmarkers believed local-only ecclesiology like most of the Southern Baptists in the middle 19th century, but they stressed and influenced a stronger practice.  They rejected what they called, “alien immersion,” baptism without proper authority.  They were saying, “Don’t accept Presbyterian baptism,” or any other Protestant baptism.  The Protestants arose from Roman Catholicism with a continuation of state church doctrine.  Baptist churches should reject their baptism, Landmarkers claimed, practiced, and encouraged all Baptists to join that.

Many today define Landmarkism with a giant falsehood.  They say Landmarkism is chain-link succession of Baptist churches.  Furthermore, they say that Landmarkism requires proof of a chain-link succession of Baptist churches all the way to the Jerusalem church.  That is not what Landmarkism is.

In a more simple way, you should understand Landmarksim as, first, since Christ, true New Testament churches always existed separate from the state church.  Second, churches start churches.  Third, baptism requires a proper administrator.  Authority is a matter of faith, but scripture recognizes the importance of it.  It does not proceed from Roman Catholicism, so it also does not come from Protestantism.

Authority isn’t arbitrary.  It is real and it is somewhere.  We should not eliminate it.  This arises from the rebellion of men’s hearts.  Men don’t want authority, especially church authority.  I see this as the primary cause of the controversy over Landmarkism and the Trail of Blood.

The Relationship Between Wokeism and Revivalism in Churches

Some of you may know that right now the Southern Baptists (SBC) convene in Southern California for their 2022 annual meeting.  At this very time, Mark Dever and 9 Marks, a Reformed faction of the SBC, produce their journal with the emphasis on revivalism (June 2022).  I wish I could be happy to join their concern.  Their accepted wokeism proceeds from the same root as revivalism, which is pragmatism.

One would think professing Reformed or Calvinists would insist on dependence on God for conversion and church growth.  I don’t believe these men.  They use measures as extreme as Charles Finney to produce results.  Among many ways, their wokeism reveals their contradiction or hypocrisy.

Jonathan Leeman writes in his introduction, and I agree, “Revivalism depends on God’s Words plus our methods.”  I also concur with these sentences:

Revivalism, which depends on our ingenuity and energy, brings short-term gains. It looks fruitful. It appeals to our yearning to see the results of our labors.

The SBC, evangelicalism, fundamentalism, and independent Baptists are all rife with revivalism.  The adherents depend on more than the Word of God for the results.

A word to describe a particularly wicked kind of “our ingenuity and energy” and “our methods” is pandering.  This manifested itself in the seeker sensitive movement and the purpose-driven movement.  A church studies its particular demographic and forms a strategy that conforms to the culture.  The region likes either pop rock, rap, or southern gospel through which a church panders to its audience.

In “Six Marks of Revivalism,” Andrew Ballitch writes, “Revivalism can actually make this happen,” referring to meeting conditions that spur church growth.  He also writes, and I agree again, “This revivalism was by no means monolithic.”  Revivalism changes in how it manifests itself, because it centers on man, not God.  The new measures of Finney have morphed into whatever measures seem necessary to produce numbers.

Not that long ago, churches and their leaders decided they needed a neutral name to attract the lost to the church.  About one of the journal authors who wrote a few of the articles, the journal says “is the senior pastor of Fellowship in the Pass Church in Beaumont, California.”   A part of the church growth movement, which is an insidious form of revivalism, is that you’ve got to market your church with a branding or label.  If it’s all God, why not just call yourself “Beaumont Baptist Church”?

Church growth philosophy says it might offend an unsaved person to hear “Baptist.”  Someone might think, “Hell fire and brimstone.”  You don’t want to have that happen, so instead you call yourself, “Fellowship in the Pass Church.”  This practice illustrates a pragmatic mindset in the trajectory of revivalism.

The name “Baptist” carries with it doctrinal connotations.  Revivalism isn’t monolithic.  Unsaved people don’t like the feeling of “Baptist,” and you can change that feeling, help along the process of church growth and increase your numbers, by choosing a neutral, apparently non-offensive name.

Like we know that gas prices went up before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we know that revivalism in its present iteration panders to unchurched Harry and Sally.  That means the “blended worship” that 9 Marks won’t include in its presentation.  You also might want to appear “woke” to your younger and perhaps ethnic demographic.

To get and keep a specialized population, you must show support to its grievances.  For instance, you should call January 6 more than a “dustup,” as a recent NFL defensive coordinator, Jack Del Rio, did and was fined 100,000 dollars by his team.  It means muting strong statements against popular sin, especially homosexuality and even abortion, in the spirit of Tim Keller.  You might be complementarian, but you manage your speech so as not to offend egalitarians.  Be careful of delineating male and female roles as if those distinctions exist.

Mark Dever, Jonathan Leeman, and 9 Marks promoted and still push wokeism.  This matches the spirit of corporate America flying rainbow flags to celebrate gay pride.  You can’t go into a McDonalds or Starbucks without rainbows hanging all over.

Have you heard of “virtue signaling”?   Wokeism sends a signal to a demographic to attract, gain, and then keep their allegiance.  It is a new measure.

Ballitch gives as a characteristic of revivalism, “emotional manipulation.”  Wokeism is emotional manipulation.  He also lists “reductionist views of conversion.”  Revivalism reduced conversion to something short of true conversion.  Wokeism better “reconstructs conversion.”  It calls for repentance over implicit racism in all white people, specifying group guilt rather than individual.

Critical theory claims special knowledge of racism, a modern form of gnosticism.  The true gospel eliminates racial and ethnic barriers and sees everyone the same.  Including race in the gospel corrupts it.

With wokeism, wokeness becomes a necessary fruit of repentance like speaking in tongues among the Charismatics.  Important transformation of language must accompany the repentance.  Leadership attracts followers by modifying language, conforming to wokeism.  This easily fits a particular view of the kingdom compatible with the amillennialism of Dever and his church.

Root to Finney’s revivalism was pelagianism.  In his Systematic Theology, he denied man’s total depravity.  He saw within man a spark of goodness, which he could fan with human measures unto salvation.  With man’s sinful condition, his rebellion, the only solution is divine.  A theoretical Calvinism with God at center does not reach actual practice.

Is there a particular approach for growing an urban church?  Revivalism and wokeism both say, “Yes.”  The Bible says, “No.”  Don’t do anything different.  Just preach the gospel.  Don’t change based on white, black, Hispanic, Chinese, African, whatever.  Depend on God.

When 9 Marks points out the moat of revivalism in its audience’s eye, it should remove the beam of wokeism in its.

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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