This is a post I wrote two years ago and it is a timely reminder for me today. Two years ago we were meeting with a group in the Plymouth Brethren tradition in East Lansing and now we are meeting with a group of Anabaptist's. Over the last two years I have come to appreciate the Anabaptist's even more as I continue to study and read works about and from them but I also can see some of the areas of concern more clearly. Nevertheless I am convinced that the church would benefit greatly from reading and studying the Anabaptist's for their simple love of Scripture, practical discipleship, embrace of non-resistance and child-like faith.
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Anabaptism Is Not The Answer
Well, unless the question is “Which faith tradition in the last 1500
years looks the most like the early church?” I make no secret of my
admiration for much of what the Anabaptists stood for, how they lived
their lives and how they viewed the church. As with any movement, there
is a real danger of going too far in my admiration. There is much that
we can learn from the Anabaptists, much to glean from how they viewed
things that run counter to our traditions (which is why, in my humble
opinion, they get slammed so severely by so many evangelicals who have
never read a thing about them). I also recognize that the Anabaptists
were flawed sinners like me and every other Christian who has ever
lived. The original Anabaptists and their modern progeny have much to
praise but likewise they have much to be cautious about. I try to
remember when praising the Anabaptists that they have their flaws and
that we should not seek to “become Anabaptists”. Anabaptism is not the
answer, but Anabaptism does help point us to the answer.
This
is true when examining any movement in the church. History is replete
with movements that spring up, often die out and are looked back at with
nostalgia. It is easier to look longingly at the days gone by than it
is to ask the hard questions for today, the “good old days” syndrome
where the past always seems better than the present.
Nowhere
is this more prevalent than among the Reformed. Ah for the glory days
of Calvin’s Geneva! If we can only plant more Reformed churches, or
convert existing churches to become Reformed. If only we can have more
Reformed seminaries and more Reformed conferences. If only less educated
Christians would just read more books by Reformed authors. If only we
could just get everyone to be Reformed, things would be better. The
blogosphere is chock full of evangelists for Reformed theology. What is
forgotten or ignored is that so much was left “unreformed” in the
Reformation, chiefly the practices and theology of the church. Now don’t
get me wrong. I cherish the great Reformed theologians, past and
present. What the Reformation recovered from Rome is nothing less than
the recovery of the Gospel itself. It can be easy to forget that in the
two thousand years since the cross, more than half of that time the
Gospel was denied by “the church” and the faith was reduced to empty
rituals controlled by power hungry popes. The Reformers risked not just
reputation and livelihood but their very lives to take a stand and
declare the Gospel of God in the face of violent Roman opposition. So
there is much to learn and appreciate from the Reformed but being
“Reformed” is not the goal.
How about another stream of
the faith? The group we gather with is part of the Plymouth Brethren
tradition although you would be hard pressed to ever hear that uttered.
We enjoy meeting as we do because we love the people we gather with and
because the meetings are so open and participatory. In marked contrast
with the incredibly loud church services that typify evangelicalism, our
gatherings are quiet and simple. Brethren Assemblies across the world
meet in open, unscripted meetings where we break bread every week and
every brother has an opportunity to speak. We gather in simple buildings
for the most part with little of the pageantry and pizzazz of modern
evangelical churches. Having said that, there are concerns in this
movement. Even an unscripted meeting can become very rote. We may not
have bulletins but we do things in a particular pattern each week. Not
as much where we gather but there are aspects of pride and legalism that
crop up among the Brethren. We are still far less of a community than
we should be. There is a lot to love about the assemblies that come
under the umbrella of the Plymouth Brethren but converting the entire
church to this movement is not the goal.
When I say we
need to be careful when looking at every faith tradition in the church,
do I really mean every one? Even the early church? Yes. Recall that Paul
rebuked Peter for his fear of eating with Gentiles in front of his
fellow Jews. The church in Corinth had all sorts of troubles. The church
in Galatia? Don’t get me started! We should not seek to emulate every
aspect of the early church because there were plenty of problems. Where
we should turn to the early church is for guidance in the key principles
of how the church should function as well as warnings about how things
can go wrong. When we read the words of Paul and Peter and James and
Luke and especially Jesus Christ, we see what the church is all about
and how it should behave. In this quest we can learn much from the
Anabaptists and the Reformers even though they were at odds in the
Reformation period and spoke pretty critically of each other. We can
learn a lot from the Plymouth Brethren and from modern Anabaptist
movements. The Puritans have much to teach us as well. Ultimately though
all of these movements are useful only inasmuch as the help us to be
more faithful to Scripture and none of these movements were perfect in
that respect. We can and should be discerning and take what is helpful
and discard what it not without regard to which faith tradition it comes
from. Just because something was written by a Reformed writer doesn’t
mean it is right and just because something is written by an Arminian
doesn’t mean it is wrong.
The church would be a lot
healthier if we would all look outside of our pet faith tradition and
humbled ourselves to learn from those we might disagree with. One thing I
have especially been blessed by over the last couple of years is
exposure to authors and ideas that I would have recoiled from as not
being “Reformed” a few years ago. As I have moved away from the idea
that being “Reformed” is the pinnacle of the Christian experience, I
have actually come to cherish the very real contributions of Reformed
writers even more, in spite of their flaws.
5 comments:
Thanks for re-posting this. It is what I needed to hear as I have been reading much Anabaptist history lately (came from SBTS and didn't get any while there). Balance, or moderation, is the key. I think you bring that out well in your article. I thought the hard work I was to do as a Christian was to study the Word and live it out, but I am finding out the harder work is to find others to gather with that are balanced and given to obedience to Scripture rather than to tradition. With the SBC controversy coming up between the "factions", I think they would do well to heed your post, as well! Blessings to you!
Craig
Well said.
Craig, I have been watching that growing storm in the SBc as well. It has been brewing for a while and I can't see how it doesn't lead to schism, which is tragic and unhelpful.
Arthur,
Well said! Thought you were writing about me in that last paragraph :)
I can only speak of the situation here, but it's an interesting exercise to take a quick view of the history of individuals who are at the forefront of factionalism and schism.
Currently,Dave Black made a very pertinent comment: "The kingdom of God is comprised of all the blood-bought saints from every nation -- a countless host all singing praises to the Triune God. Christians are not merely people who are trying to become God's children. They ARE members of the same family, the only Christian nation the world will ever know."
There is no ghetto like a Christian one, and we so easily think ours is the best. I hate to admit this, but I think less of any Christian who will not read outside of his chosen denomination/sect.
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