Of this salvation the prophets have inquired and searched carefully...
 
...which angels desire to look into.
~ 1 Pet 1:10-12
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Taking Chance pt 1
take some time and watch this very important film and learn the meaning of honor!
Thursday, May 27, 2010
The Disturbing Legacy of Charles Finney
No single man is more responsible for the distortion of Christian truth in our age than Charles Grandison Finney. His "new measures" created a framework for modern decision theology and Evangelical Revivalism. In this excellent article, Dr. Mike Horton explains how Charles Finney distorted the important doctrine of salvation.
Jerry Falwell calls     him "one of my heroes and a hero to many evangelicals, including Billy Graham."     I recall wandering through the Billy Graham Center some years ago, observing     the place of honor given to Charles Finney in the evangelical tradition,     reinforced by the first class in theology I had at a Christian college, where     Finney’s work was required reading. The New York revivalist was the     oft-quoted and celebrated champion of the Christian singer Keith Green and the     Youth With A Mission organization. He is particularly esteemed among the     leaders of the Christian Right and the Christian Left, by both Jerry Falwell     and Jim Wallis (Sojourners’ magazine), and his imprint can be seen in     movements that appear to be diverse, but in reality are merely heirs to     Finney’s legacy. From the Vineyard movement and the Church Growth Movement     to the political and social crusades, televangelism, and the Promise Keepers     movement, as a former Wheaton College president rather glowingly cheered,     "Finney, lives on!"
That is because Finney’s moralistic impulse     envisioned a church that was in large measure an agency of personal and social     reform rather than the institution in which the means of grace, Word and     Sacrament, are made available to believers who then take the Gospel to the     world. In the nineteenth century, the evangelical movement became increasingly     identified with political causes-from abolition of slavery and child labor     legislation to women’s rights and the prohibition of alcohol. In a     desperate effort at regaining this institutional power and the glory of     "Christian America" (a vision that is always powerful in the imagination, but,     after the disintegration of Puritan New England, elusive), the turn-of-the     century Protestant establishment launched moral campaigns to "Americanize"     immigrants, enforce moral instruction and "character education." Evangelists     pitched their American gospel in terms of its practical usefulness to the     individual and the nation.
That is why Finney is so popular. He is the     tallest marker in the shift from Reformation orthodoxy, evident in the Great     Awakening (under Edwards and Whitefield) to Arminian (indeed, even Pelagian)     revivalism. evident from the Second Great Awakening to the present. To     demonstrate the debt of modern evangelicalism to Finney, we must first notice     his theological departures. From these departures, Finney became the father of     the antecedents to some of today’s greatest challenges within evangelical     churches, namely, the church growth movement, Pentecostalism and political     revivalism.
Who is Finney?
    Reacting against the pervasive Calvinism of the Great Awakening, the successors     of that great movement of God’s Spirit turned from God to humans, from the     preaching of objective content (namely, Christ and him crucified) to the     emphasis on getting a person to "make a decision."
Charles Finney     (1792-1875) ministered in the wake of the "Second Awakening," as it has been     called. A Presbyterian layover, Finney one day experienced "a mighty baptism of     the Holy Ghost" which "like a wave of electricity going through and through me     ... seemed to come in waves of liquid love." The next morning, he informed his     first client of the day, "I have a retainer from the Lord Jesus Christ to plead     his cause and I cannot plead yours. "Refusing to attend Princeton Seminary (or     any seminary, for that matter). Finney began conducting revivals in upstate New     York. One of his most popular sermons was "Sinners Bound to Change Their Own     Hearts."
Finney’s one question for any given teaching was, "Is it     fit to convert sinners with?" One result of Finney’s revivalism was the     division of Presbyterians in Philadelphia and New York into Arminian and     Calvinistic factions. His "New Measures" included the "anxious bench"     (precursor to today’s altar call), emotional tactics that led to fainting     and weeping, and other "excitements," as Finney and his followers called     them.
Finney’s Theology?
    One need go no further than the table of contents of his Systematic     Theology to learn that Finney’s entire theology revolved around human     morality. Chapters one through five are on moral government, obligation, and     the unity of moral action; chapters six and seven are "Obedience Entire," as     chapters eight through fourteen discuss attributes of love, selfishness, and     virtues and vice in general. Not until the twenty-first chapter does one read     anything that is especially Christian in its interest, on the atonement. This     is followed by a discussion of regeneration, repentance, and faith. There is     one chapter on justification followed by six on sanctification. In other words,     Finney did not really write a Systematic Theology, but a collection of essays     on ethics.
But that is not to say that Finney’s Systematic     Theology does not contain some significant statements of theology.
    First, in answer to the question, "Does a Christian cease to be a Christian,     whenever he commits a sin?", Finney answers:
"Whenever he sins, he must, for the time being, cease to be holy. This is self-evident. Whenever he sins, he must be condemned; he must incur the penalty of the law of God ... If it be said that the precept is still binding upon him, but that with respect to the Christian, the penalty is forever set aside, or abrogated, I reply, that to abrogate the penalty is to repeal the precept, for a precept without penalty is no law. It is only counsel or advice. The Christian, therefore, is justified no longer than he obeys, and must be condemned when he disobeys or Antinomianism is true ... In these respects, then, the sinning Christian and the unconverted sinner are upon precisely the same ground (p. 46)."
Finney believed that     God demanded absolute perfection, but instead of that leading him to seek his     perfect righteousness in Christ, he concluded that "... full present obedience     is a condition of justification. But again, to the question, can man be     justified while sin remains in him? Surely he cannot, either upon legal or     gospel principles, unless the law be repealed ... But can he be pardoned and     accepted, and justified, in the gospel sense, while sin, any degree of sin,     remains in him? Certainly not" (p. 57).
Finney declares of the     Reformation’s formula simul justus et peccator or "simultaneously     justified and sinful," "This error has slain more souls, I fear, than all the     Universalism that ever cursed the world." For, "Whenever a Christian sins he     comes under condemnation, and must repent and do his first works, or be lost"     (p.60).
Finney’s doctrine of justification rests upon a denial of     the doctrine of original sin. Held by both Roman Catholics and Protestants,     this biblical teaching insists that we are all born into this world inheriting     Adam’s guilt and corruption. We are, therefore, in bondage to a sinful     nature. As someone has said, "We sin because we’re sinners": the condition     of sin determines the acts of sin, rather than vice versa. But Finney followed     Pelagius, the fifth-century heretic, who was condemned by more church councils     than any other person in church history, in denying this doctrine.
    Finney believed that human beings were capable of choosing whether they would     be corrupt by nature or redeemed, referring to original sin as an     "anti-scriptural and nonsensical dogma" (p.179). In clear terms, Finney denied     the notion that human beings possess a sinful nature (ibid.). Therefore, if     Adam leads us into sin, not by our inheriting his guilt and corruption, but by     following his poor example, this leads logically to the view of Christ, the     Second Adam, as saving by example. This is precisely where Finney takes it, in     his explanation of the atonement.
The first thing we must note about     the atonement, Finney says, is that Christ could not have died for anyone     else’s sins than his own. His obedience to the law and his perfect     righteousness were sufficient to save him, but could not legally be accepted on     behalf of others. That Finney’s whole theology is driven by a passion for     moral improvement is seen on this very point: "If he [Christ] had obeyed the     Law as our substitute, then why should our own return to personal obedience be     insisted upon as a sine qua non of our salvation" (p.206)? In other     words, why would God insist that we save ourselves by our own obedience if     Christ’s work was sufficient? The reader should recall the words of St.     Paul in this regard, "I do not nullify the grace of God’, for if     justification comes through the law, then Christ died for nothing." It would     seem that Finney’s reply is one of agreement. The difference is, he has no     difficulty believing both of those premises.
That is not entirely     fair, of course, because Finney did believe that Christ died for     something—not for someone, but for something. In other words, he died for     a purpose, but not for people. The purpose of that death was to reassert     God’s moral government and to lead us to eternal life by example, as     Adam’s example excited us to sin. Why did Christ die? God knew that "The     atonement would present to creatures the highest possible motives to virtue.     Example is the highest moral influence that can be exerted ... If the     benevolence manifested in the atonement does not subdue the selfishness of     sinners, their case is hopeless" (p.209). Therefore, we are not helpless     sinners who need to,’ be redeemed, but wayward sinners who need a     demonstration of selflessness so moving that we will be excited to leave off     selfishness. Not only did Finney believe that the "moral influence" theory of     the atonement was the chief way of understanding the cross; he explicitly     denied the substitutionary atonement, which
"assumes that the atonement was a literal payment of a debt, which we have seen does not consist with the nature of the atonement ... It is true, that the atonement, of itself, does not secure the salvation of any one" (p.217).
Then there is the     matter of applying redemption. Throwing off Reformation orthodoxy, Finney     argued strenuously against the belief that the new birth is a divine gift,     insisting that "regeneration consists in the sinner changing his ultimate     choice, intention, preference; or in changing from selfishness to love or     benevolence," as moved by the moral influence of Christ’s moving example     (p.224). "Original sin, physical regeneration, and all their kindred and     resulting dogmas, are alike subversive of the gospel, and repulsive to the     human intelligence" (p.236).
Having nothing to do with original sin, a     substitutionary atonement, and the supernatural character of the new birth,     Finney proceeds to attack "the article by which the church stands or     falls"— justification by grace alone through faith alone.
    Distorting the Cardinal Doctrine of     Justification
The Reformers insisted, on the basis of clear     biblical texts, that justification (in the Greek, "to declare righteous,"     rather than "to make righteous") was a forensic (i.e., legal) verdict. In other     words, whereas Rome maintained that justification was a process of making a bad     person better, the Reformers argued that it was a declaration or pronouncement     that had someone else’s righteousness (i.e., Christ’s) as its basis.     Therefore, it was a perfect, once and-for-all verdict of right standing.
  
This declaration was to be pronounced at the beginning of the Christian     life, not in the middle or at the end. The key words in the evangelical     doctrine are "forensic" (legal) and "imputation" (crediting one’s account,     as opposed to the idea of "infusion" of a righteousness within a person’s     soul). Knowing all of this, Finney declares,
To this, Finney replies: "The doctrine of imputed righteousness, or that Christ’s obedience to the law was accounted as our obedience, is founded on a most false and nonsensical assumption." After all, Christ’s righteousness "could do no more than justify himself. It can never be imputed to us ... it was naturally impossible, then, for him to obey in our behalf " This "representing of the atonement as the ground of the sinner’s justification has been a sad occasion of stumbling to many" (pp.320-2)."But for sinners to be forensically pronounced just, is impossible and absurd... As we shall see, there are many conditions, while there is but one ground, of the justification of sinners ... As has already been said, there can be no justification in a legal or forensic sense, but upon the ground of universal, perfect, and uninterrupted obedience to law. This is of course denied by those who hold that gospel justification, or the justification of penitent sinners, is of the nature of a forensic or judicial justification. They hold to the legal maxim that what a man does by another he does by himself, and therefore the law regards Christ’s obedience as ours, on the ground that he obeyed for us."
The view that faith is the sole condition of justification is "the antinomian view," Finney asserts. "We shall see that perseverance in obedience to the end of life is also a condition of justification. Some theologians have made justification a condition of sanctification, instead of making sanctification a condition of justification. But this we shall see is an erroneous view of the subject." (pp.326-7).
Finney Today
As the noted Princeton theologian B. B. Warfield pointed out so eloquently, there are throughout history only two religions: heathenism, of which Pelagianism is a religious expression, and a supernatural redemption.
With Warfield and those who so seriously warned their brothers and sisters of these errors among Finney and his successors, we too must come to terms with the wildly heterodox strain in American Protestantism. With roots in Finney’s revivalism, perhaps evangelical and liberal Protestantism are not that far apart after all. His "New Measures," like today’s Church Growth Movement, made human choices and emotions the center of the church’s ministry, ridiculed theology, and replaced the preaching of Christ with the preaching of conversion.
It is upon Finney’s naturalistic moralism that the Christian political and social crusades build their faith in humanity and its resources in self-salvation. Sounding not a little like a deist, Finney declared, "There is nothing in religion beyond the ordinary powers of nature. It consists entirely in the right exercise of the powers of nature. It is just that, and nothing else. When mankind becomes truly religious, they are not enabled to put forth exertions which they were unable before to put forth. They only exert powers which they had before, in a different way, and use them for the glory of God." As the new birth is a natural phenomenon for Finney, so too a revival: "A revival is not a miracle, nor dependent on a miracle, in any sense. It is a purely philosophical result of the right use of the constituted means—as much so as any other effect produced by the application of means."
The belief that the new birth and revival depend necessarily on divine activity is pernicious. "No doctrine," he says, "is more dangerous than this to the prosperity of the Church, and nothing more absurd" (Revivals of Religion [Revell], pp.4-5).
When the leaders of the Church Growth Movement claim that theology gets in the way of growth and insist that it does not matter what a particular church believes: growth is a matter of following the proper principles, they are displaying their debt to Finney.
When leaders of the Vineyard movement praise this sub-Christian enterprise and the barking, roaring, screaming, laughing, and other strange phenomena on the basis that "it works" and one must judge its truth by its fruit, they are following Finney as well as the father of American pragmatism, William James, who declared that truth must be judged on the basis of "its cash-value in experiential terms."
Thus, in Finney’s theology, God is not sovereign, man is not a sinner by nature, the atonement is not a true payment for sin, justification by imputation is insulting to reason and morality, the new birth is simply the effect of successful techniques, and revival is a natural result of clever campaigns. In his fresh introduction to the bicentennial edition of Finney’s Systematic Theology, Harry Conn commends Finney’s pragmatism: "Many servants of our Lord should be diligently searching for a gospel that ‘works’, and I am happy to state they can find it in this volume."
As Whitney R. Cross has carefully documented, the stretch of territory in which Finney’s revivals were most frequent was also the cradle of the perfectionistic cults that plagued that century. A gospel that "works" for zealous perfectionists one moment merely creates tomorrow’s disillusioned and spent supersaints. Needless to say, Finney’s message is radically different from the evangelical faith, as is the basic orientation of the movements we see around us today that bear his imprint such as: revivalism (or its modern label. the Church Growth Movement), or Pentecostal perfectionism and emotionalism, or political triumphalism based on the ideal of "Christian America," or the anti-intellectual, and antidoctrinal tendencies of many American evangelicals and fundamentalists.
Not only did the revivalist abandon the doctrine of justification, making him a renegade against evangelical Christianity; he repudiated doctrines, such as original sin and the substitutionary atonement, that have been embraced by Roman Catholics and Protestants alike. Therefore, Finney is not merely an Arminian’, but a Pelagian. He is not only an enemy of evangelical Protestantism, but of historic Christianity of the broadest sort.
Of one thing Finney was absolutely correct: The Gospel held by the Reformers whom he attacked directly, and indeed held by the whole company of evangelicals, is "another gospel" in distinction from the one proclaimed by Charles Finney. The question of our moment is, With which gospel will we side?
http://www.mtio.com/articles/aissar81.htm
Monday, May 17, 2010
The Contemporvant Service
Like most viral videos seeking to make a point, this one has its supporters and detractors. Some call it a brilliant parody while others are deeply offended by its supposed slap in the face at churches targeting unbelievers. I tend to side with the first group, and I think there are a few things we can learn from it.
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Why Words Matter In A Worship Song
Yesterday I wrote a post entitled How to Write An Awful Worship Song. The post was 75% humorous and sarcastic, and was written primarily out of my own experiences in writing awful worship songs. I wasn’t taking pot shots at modern songs or songwriters.
However, a number of people made comments along these lines:
What matters most in a worship song is the heart behind the song. If it comes from a person’s heart and is a sincere act of worship, then it’s a good worship song.
To a certain extent, I agree. The sacrificial death of Christ makes our flawed, imperfect praise acceptable to God. My best worship is always stained with sin, and I always need Jesus to make my worship acceptable. And the heart really does matter. God does not like insincere worship.
But, we need to be very careful in how we think about this. The heart behind a worship song isn’t the only thing that matters. The words of the song and the ideas conveyed by a song matter. A whole lot.
Here’s why: we don’t get to worship God in whatever way we choose. We can’t sing whatever we want about God, no matter how deep our sincerity. In Scripture God has told who He is and how He must be worshiped. And because God is God, He gets to make the rules. He gets to tell us what worship should look like. In John 4:23-24 Jesus said:
But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him.
God is seeking men and women who will worship Him in truth. This truth is first and foremost the truth of God revealed through Jesus Christ.
Truth matters. Sound doctrine matters. Our songs should be saturated with truth. It doesn’t please God when we sing false things about Him. It pleases Him when our songs are packed with Biblical truth.
Every one of us is a theologian. We all have our own thoughts and  ideas about God. The question is, are we good theologians? Do we think  and sing right, true, good thoughts about God? For the sake of God’s  honor, let’s be sure that our songs help us be good theologians.
Monday, May 3, 2010
Saturday, May 1, 2010
A few more plodders needed
Read the rest
