Friday, January 02, 2009

The fruits of hyper-confessionalism

I have been reading through a particularly painful series of blog posts this morning by Dr. R. Scott Clark at the Heidelblog. His series "On Churchless Evangelicals" is full of unwarranted assumptions and false equivalencies. The sort of equivalence that assumes that any mention of "church", "congregation", "fellowship" must by implication mean the institutionalized church. I am slowly picking apart what he has written because it is a great example of the prevailing thought in some circles that the early church had services that resembled modern, confessional, Reformed, institutional church services. It is taking me some time because there is so much that is wrong to unpack.

But then I ran across this little blurb and had to interrupt what I was doing to point it out...

On the Christological and soteriological issues alone the Reformed were warranted in describing the 16th-century Anabaptists as “sects.” There was, however, another issue which the Reformed mentioned consistently as providing grounds for such a label, i.e. the Anabaptist denial of infant baptism.

However orthodox modern Baptists are on the other issues, they continue to share with the Anabaptists this fundamental conviction that however valid infant circumcision was prior to the incarnation, the New Covenant is such that there is no place for infant baptism as a proper recognition that the children of believers are members of the covenant of grace just as much today as they were in Abraham’s day.

This rejection of the status of Christian children as such introduced (and continues to perpetuate) a principle of radical discontinuity between Abraham and the Christian, i.e. a radical principle of discontinuity in the history of redemption and in the covenant of grace. This principle of radical discontinuity, this denial of the fundamental unity of the covenant of grace as symbolized in the administration of the sign and seal of the covenant of grace to covenant children, is serious enough to warrant saying that any congregation that will not practice infant initiation (baptism) into the administration of the covenant of grace is not a church. The Protestants criticized the Anabaptists on these very grounds. Denial of infant initiation is a denial of the catholicity of the church stretching back to Abraham and it is too much like the Gnostic denial of the unity of the covenant of grace in the 2nd and 3rd centuries.


Did you catch that? If you won't baptize infants, you are not only not "Reformed" in the eyes of the self-appointed arbiter of all things "Reformed", you are not even a real church. I knew that Dr. Clark would be unable to avoid taking potshots about baptism. So now not only are you unworthy in Dr. Clark's eyes to carry the label "Reformed" if you don't baptize infants, now if you are in a church and it doesn't baptize infants, it isn't even really a church at all. That takes his flawed premise to it's logical conclusion. I made the opposite argument some time ago in this post Maybe Landmarkism has some of it right? and I stand by that today. The Scripture is plain in both example and command that baptism is reserved for professing believers. What is old (infant circumcision, the Old Covenant, temple sacrifice) is fading away, replaced by what is new. Infant baptism is a misapplication of an Old Covenant sign in a New Covenant church, and is unwarranted.

That is only one place where Dr. Clark's premise is flawed. There are so many places where I disagree with him, which is why I am working on a separate post to deal with it. I would agree however in part with his assessment here:

What happened to me in 1961 was, for them, nothing than mere magic or sentiment but it was not baptism. Therefore, I and all such persons are, in their view, unbaptized. For most of Christian history to say that someone was unbaptized was to unchurch them. In other words, to call me unbaptized is to say that I am not really a Christian.

On the one hand, I would agree with part of his statement above. Whatever the ceremony he went through in 1961, I assume as an infant, it was not baptism which can only rightly by Scriptural command and example follow profession of faith. So in that he is "unbaptized". I would say that at worst he is a Christian who, in this very vital area, is being disobedient to the plain commands of Scripture. He needs to repent and submit to baptism. But does that mean he isn't a Christian? Does any rational Baptist suggest that he is not a Christian? I have doubts about the validity of a church that holds to infant baptism, but I have never suggested that those baptized as infants are not Christians. He is being a bit hysterical here and indulging in more than a little hyperbole. I don't equate church membership with being a Christian, so I can recognize Dr. Clark as a brother in Christ even if he is a member of a church that engages in a unBiblical practice.

This is what happens when you become hyper-confessional (not sure if that is a word, or if I just made it up but it fits). The confession becomes the end in and of itself, practically speaking. I love the great confessions, the Westminster and the London Baptist Confession. They are great tools and can help lead to greater understanding of the Word, but they are just tools. I have the confessions on my shelf, and I have expositions of the confessions. All great stuff. But you can know the confessions forward and backward and not know Christ. It is in His Word, and His Word alone, that He is found. The Word is more than a series of footnotes in the Reformed confessions, it is the lifeblood of the church.

(I am working through the rest of his three post series, but that comment required an immediate response.)

7 comments:

R. Scott Clark said...

Arthur,

Aren't you making my point?

You want to unbaptize me but you're offended that I unchurch you. Well, what's a congregation of unbaptized people? Is it a church in the proper sense of word? Aren't you unchurching me?

It's not about hyperconfessionalism, but it's about different confessions.

We confess different faiths. All I ask is that you don't try to pass off your confession as if it were mine simply because we might agree on some soteriological issues.

rsc
http://heidelblog.wordpress.com

Arthur Sido said...

Dr. Clark,

"We confess different faiths."

We confess different faiths? We might hold to different confessions but we, at least I think we do, share a common faith in Christ. Can someone who baptizes infants and another person who does not not share a common faith in Christ? Or are you elevating a church practice to a salvation issue?

I am hoping that was just poorly worded.

There is one body and one Spirit--just as you were called to the one hope that belongs to your call-- one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all. (Ephesians 4:4-6)

R. Scott Clark said...

Okay, we hold different confessions.

You regard me as unbaptized and I regard you as a baptized rebel but this hardly makes us both Reformed.

You seem to continue to want to reduce "Reformed" to the 5 Points.

Am I correct?

Isn't it the case that you reject the Reformed view of the church, sacraments, and redemptive history?

James said...

Is it truly a Reformed view? Or is it an Institutional view? For the most part, Reformed ecclesiology must get its evidence and support from Church History and the practice of adaptations to the origin seen in Scripture. What if we looked at the tumult caused by man's traditionalism instead of the piety earned through the actions of men?

What redemptive history takes precedence over that of the Savior dying on the cross?

Arthur Sido said...

Dr. Clark,

"Isn't it the case that you reject the Reformed view of the church, sacraments, and redemptive history?"

If I accept, which I do not, your narrow, rigid definition of “Reformed” based on church traditions of Reformed denomoninations and devotion to every line item of some of the historic confessions, than I would have to say yes. But I don’t accept your definition of what makes one Reformed.

It comes down to what Reformed means. Is it a very narrowly defined view that requires adherence to certain ecclesiastical practices in addition to church traditions as codified in a couple of confessions? Or is being Reformed holding to Reformed theology, which I don’t believe requires holding to every jot and tittle of Reformed church practice, i.e. infant baptism?

Again the question comes back to whether we hold to the confessions because they are good summations of Reformed theology or if we are Reformed because we hold to the Reformed confessions. A classic chicken and egg question.

Your positions is apparently that the sole qualifier of one as being “Reformed” is an affirmation of the confessions. My position is that I find the confessions useful tools because I hold to Reformed theology, which is more than merely a few points of soteriology. Reformed theology is so much more than the confessions. Reformed theology would still be true if none of the Reformed confessions had ever been written. The five points of Calvinism would still be true if Calvin has never lived. God would still be sovereign if any of the great theologians throughout the ages had never lived.

I like the definition provided at Monergism.com, storehouse of all things Reformed.

What is Reformed Theology? Reformed theology...

...presupposes God's Word alone as our ultimate authority.

...stresses the sovereignty of God, that is, His reign over all things, meticulously determining (Eph 1:11)all that comes to pass (i.e. God is never taken by surprise).

...emphasizes a Christ-Centered proclamation of the gospel, that salvation is wholly of God, by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone as revealed in the Scripture alone to the Glory of God alone.

...views the Bible as a redemptive-historical organic unfolding of revelation which is structured by three covenants (redemption, works and grace).

It goes without saying that those in the Reformed Tradition hold to the doctrines of grace (the five points of Calvinism), man's helpless condition apart from Christ, the necessity of evangelism and the work of the Holy Spirit who (monergistically) quickens the dead to life through the preaching of the word as God turning their heart of stone to flesh, and opening their eyes to the excellencies of the gospel (uniting them to Christ). In other words, RT stresses the way the objective, written Word together with the inner, supernatural ministry of the Holy Spirit work together. For the Word without the illumination of the Holy Spirit remains a closed book. We (the church) cast forth the seed of the gospel and the Holy Spirit germinates it, so to speak, with the blood of Christ bringing forth life in people from every nation, tribe, language, and people (Rev 14:6). RT traces its historical and theological lineage back to the theology of Christ, Paul, Augustine and to the Protestant Reformation of the 16th Century.

Now that I can affirm, whether or not some people recognize my “Reformed” credentials!

Troy said...

I think it might be better to ignore R. Scott Clark rather then to take him to seriously. His comment, "We confess different faiths." kind of gives you a clue as to where he is coming from.

Arthur Sido said...

Troy,

By and large I have given up trying to engage people like Dr. Clark. Those who are concerned first and foremost with defending their own narrow and peculiar brand of Christianity can fight with one another without me!