By Albert Mohler
AlbertMohler.com
http://www.albertmohler.com/2013/05/01/confessional-integrity-and-the-stewardship-of-words/
In the beginning was the Word. Christians rightly cherish the
declaration that our Savior, the crucified and resurrected Lord Jesus
Christ, is first known as the Word — the one whom the Father has sent to
communicate and to accomplish our redemption. We are saved because the
Word became flesh and dwelt among us.
Believers are then assigned the task of telling others about the
salvation that Christ has brought, and this requires the use of words.
We tell the story of Jesus by deploying words, and we cannot tell the
story without them. Our testimony, our teaching, and our theology all
require the use of words. Words are essential to our worship, our
preaching, our singing, and our spiritual conversation. In other words,
words are essential to the Christian faith and central in the lives of
believers.
As Martin Luther rightly observed, the church house is to be a “mouth
house” where words, not images or dramatic acts, stand at the center of
the church’s attention and concern. We live by words and we die by
words.
Truth, life, and health are found in the right words. Lies,
disaster, and death are found in the wrong words. The Apostle Paul
warned Timothy, “If anyone teaches a different doctrine and does not
agree with the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ and the teaching
that accords with godliness, he is puffed up with conceit and
understands nothing. He has an unhealthy craving for controversy and for
quarrels about words, which produce envy, dissension, slander, evil
suspicions, and constant friction among people who are depraved in mind
and deprived of the truth, imagining that godliness is a means of gain.”
[1 Timothy 6:3-5]
Later, Paul will instruct Timothy that sound words come to us in a
revealed pattern. “Follow the pattern of sound words that you have heard
from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. By the Holy
Spirit who dwells within us, guard the good deposit entrusted to you.”
[2 Timothy 1:13-14]
Theological education is a deadly serious business. The stakes are so
high. A theological seminary that serves faithfully will be a source of
health and life for the church, but an unfaithful seminary will set
loose a torrent of trouble, untruth, and sickness upon Christ’s people.
Inevitably, the seminaries are the incubators of the church’s future.
The teaching imparted to seminarians will shortly be inflicted upon
congregations, where the result will be either fruitfulness or
barrenness, vitality or lethargy, advance or decline, spiritual life, or
spiritual death.
Sadly, the landscape is littered with theological institutions that
have poorly taught and have been poorly led. Theological liberalism has
destroyed scores of seminaries, divinity schools, and other institutions
for the education of the ministry. Many of these schools are now
extinct, even as the churches they served have been evacuated. Others
linger on, committed to the mission of revising the Christian faith in
order to make peace with the spirit of the age. These schools
intentionally and boldly deny the pattern of sound words in order to
devise new words for a new age — producing a new faith. As J. Gresham
Machen rightly observed almost a century ago, we do not really face two
rival versions of Christianity. We face Christianity on the one hand
and, on the other hand, some other religion that selectively uses
Christian words, but is not Christianity.
How does this happen? Rarely does an institution decide, in one
comprehensive moment of decision, to abandon the faith and seek after
another. The process is far more dangerous and subtle. A direct
institutional evasion would be instantly recognized and corrected, if
announced honestly at the onset. Instead, theological disaster usually
comes by means of drift and evasion, shading and equivocation.
Eventually, the drift accumulates into momentum and the school abandons
doctrine after doctrine, truth claim after truth claim, until the
pattern of sound words, and often the sound words themselves, are
mocked, denied, and cast aside in the spirit of theological
embarrassment.
As James Petigru Boyce, founder of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary, argued, “It is with a single man that error usually
commences.” When he wrote those words in 1856, he knew that pattern by
observation of church history. All too soon, he would know this sad
truth by personal observation.
By the time Southern Baptists were ready to establish a theological
seminary, many schools for the training of ministers had already been
lost to theological liberalism. Included among these were both Harvard
and Yale, even as Yale had been envisioned, at least in part, as a
corrective to Harvard. Theological concessions in theological seminaries
had already weakened the Baptists of the North. Drawing upon the
lessons of the past, Southern Baptists were determined to establish
schools bound by covenant and constitution to a confession of faith — to
the pattern of sound words.
Confessional seminaries require professors to sign a statement of
faith, designed to safeguard by explicit theological summary. The sad
experience of fallen and troubled schools led Southern Baptists to
require that faculty members must teach in accordance with the
confession of faith, and not contrary to anything therein. Added to this
were warnings against any private understanding with a professor, or
any hesitation or mental reservation. Teachers in a confessional school
not only pledge by sacred covenant to teach “in accordance with and not
contrary to” the confession of faith, but to do so gladly , eagerly, and
totally.
We are living in an anti-confessional age. Our society and its
reigning academic culture are committed to individual autonomy and
expression, as well as to an increasingly relativistic conception of
truth. The language of higher education is overwhelmingly dominated by
claims of academic freedom, rather than academic responsibility. In most
schools, a confession of faith is an anathema, not just an anachronism.
But, among us, a confession of faith must be seen as a gift and
covenant. It is a sacred trust that guards revealed truths. A confession
of faith never stands above the Bible, but the Bible itself mandates
concern for the pattern of sound words.
Theologian Russell Reno has noted that confessions of faith serve a dual purpose — to define truth and to isolate falsehood:
“The impulse behind confessions of faith is doxological, the desire
to speak the truth about God, to give voice to the beauty of holiness in
the fullest possible sense. However, the particular forms that
historical confessions take are shaped by confrontation. Their purpose
is to respond to the spirit of the age by re-articulating in a pointed
way the specific content of Christianity so as to face new challenges as
well as new forms of old challenges. As a result, formal confessions
are characterized by pointed distinctions. They are exercises in drawing
boundaries where the particular force of traditional Christian claims
is sharpened to heighten the contrast between true belief and false
belief…. As they shape our faith, confessions structure our identities.”
Confessions structure our identities. If not, they are useless.
Within a theological seminary, the confession must function as a living
commitment, not as a dead letter. As Reno notes, confessions are
characterized by pointed distinctions. They are exercises in drawing
boundaries, addressing new heresies and new forms of old heresies. False
teachings are always around us. Our task is to make certain that they
do not take hold among us.
For many denominations, churches, and seminaries, confessions of
faith are kept as references to a faith once believed, but available
only in the present as a remembrance of things past. Among us, the
confession must guard the faith once for all delivered to the saints as a
living faith.
Southern Baptists learned these lessons the hardest way, and we have
paid the price of theological controversy for the sake of recovering
that which was lost. By God’s grace, we have been granted a recovery, if
we will keep it. Now, a new generation must take up this responsibility
in the face of new challenges, knowing that these challenges, like the
denial of biblical inerrancy, will require the full force of conviction
to confront, and the full force of confession to contain.
We must look to a new generation of teachers who will gladly teach in
accordance with and not contrary to all that is affirmed in our
confession of faith, without hesitation or mental reservation. We must
pray for an army of theological teachers ready to do battle with the
spirit of the age and, at the same time, to offer a glad defense of the
hope that is in us, with gentleness and respect. We must look to
professors who will be determined to stand with the apostles and the
saints of God throughout the ages in the sacred democracy of the dead
that points to doctrinal fidelity.
Faithfulness will be found in the stewardship of words, in the
pattern of sound words revealed in the Holy Scriptures, and in the
teaching that accords with godliness. There can be no lasting fidelity
without confessional integrity.
The ultimate purpose of confessional integrity is indeed doxological —
to make certain that we rightly worship and love God. The confession
guards the sound words of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and is thus
essential to missions and evangelism.
As Fanny Crosby taught us to sing: “Tell me the story of Jesus, write
on my heart every word; tell me the story most precious, sweetest that
ever was heard.
In the end, theological education is all about the stewardship of words. So it was when Paul commissioned Timothy. So is it now.
“Follow the pattern of sound words that you have heard from me, in
the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. By the Holy Spirit who
dwells within us, guard the good deposit entrusted to you.” [2 Timothy
1:13-14]
May those words serve as the Magna Carta of theological education, May the church faithfully teach, even as it is faithfully taught, until Jesus comes. Amen.