Is
Orthodoxy Dead?
Church history tells us
that the charge pietistic reformers level against the church is
that the church practices “dead orthodoxy.” Some years ago I
hosted a pastor’s meeting at which pastors could discuss
theological ideas. Position papers were presented and then
critiqued by the group. Some of the pastors came from the
Charismatic movement (also pietistic). A common theme from the
Charismatic pastors was their distain for doctrine. Because
theirs was a reform movement, they were fighting “dead
orthodoxy.”
I spoke after one of
our meetings with a pastor who told me that when he was a
Lutheran, reciting creeds and doctrines caused him to be
spiritually dead. I responded, “So believing that Jesus Christ
is God Incarnate, who lived a sinless life, who died for sins
and was raised on the third day and bodily ascended into heaven
killed you spiritually?” He said, “I didn’t really believe those
things.” He had assumed that the cause of his unbelief was not
sin, but a church that recited creeds. I believe that it is much
better to preach those doctrines from the pulpit and call for
people to repent and turn to Christ than to make recitation part
of a liturgy. But nevertheless the creeds were not the problem,
unbelief was.
Christian orthodoxy
simply means holding to the true beliefs revealed in Scripture.
These beliefs are often systematized as topical teachings such
as the doctrine of Christ, the doctrine of the Trinity, the
doctrine of justification, and so on. Genuine faith in the truth
of the gospel is saving faith. No one having saving faith is
“dead.” In Ephesians 2:1-8 Paul teaches that we were dead, but
that God made us alive, and that He did so by grace through
faith. It is also true that where genuine saving faith exists,
it produces evidence in the lives of those who have it as Paul
asserts in Ephesians 2:10. So when James says that faith without
works is dead, he refers to something other than the type of
faith that Paul says is a work of grace. It is the type of faith
demons have (see James 2:17-19). In the gospel of John, John
uses the term “believe” in two ways.24
There are those, for example, who “believed” in John 8:30 but
when confronted with their need to be set free began to debate
Jesus and later accused him of sin (see John 8:31-47). Jesus
told them they were definitely not from God. But in many other
places in John those who believe are true believers who have
eternal life.
My conclusion is that
“dead orthodoxy” is orthodoxy that people might fight for
because of parochial reasons (“this is our tradition and
no one is going to change it”) but in which they put only mental
assent faith. I gave mental assent to creeds when I was 12 years
old because it was my duty to join the church at that age; but I
was a dead sinner. But it most assuredly was not the truth
contained in the creeds that killed me; it was my unbelief.
Those “believers” in John 8 proved themselves to be unbelievers
by refusing to become Jesus’ disciples, learn the truth, and be
set free.
Pietism misdiagnoses
the problem and creates a false solution. It sees a compromised
church that is apparently caught in dead orthodoxy. The real
problem is not dead orthodoxy but spiritually dead sinners who
give mental assent to orthodox truth but show no signs of
regeneration. If indeed such a church existed (if truth really
is there God has His remnant there as well), that church would
be characterized by worldliness and sin. This is the case
because dead sinners do not bear spiritual fruit. There was a
church in Revelation that Jesus called “dead.” Pietism that
holds to the true gospel but goes beyond it imagining that the
dead sinners who are church members are Christians. When some of
them become regenerate through the efforts of the pietists, they
assume they have now entered a higher class of Christianity.
They posit two types of Christian: “carnal” Christians and
“spiritual” Christians. But in reality there are only Christians
and dead sinners.
Furthermore, pietism
sees the lack of good fruit in the “dead orthodox” churches to
be a sign that teaching doctrine is of no value and that what
really matters is practice and not doctrine. So they gravitate
to works righteousness. This is precisely the mode of the
Emerging Church. It has been the approach of pietists throughout
history. But works that do not result from a prior work of grace
(which is the result of God’s work through the gospel to convert
dead sinners) are in fact “dead works” no matter how pious they
look. Mother Theresa did good works but denied the exclusive
claims of the gospel. That “piety” is of no eternal value if
those who were the recipients of the good works never hear or
believe the gospel and thus end up in hell.
God’s revealed truth is
never dead, but sometimes it falls on dead ears. In John 6
multitudes who were interested in following Jesus for bread left
Him when He spoke the truth to them. The few who did not have
dead ears were asked if they would leave too. Peter answered for
the group: “Simon Peter answered Him, ‘Lord, to whom shall we
go? You have words of eternal life. And we have believed and
have come to know that You are the Holy One of God’” (John
6:68, 69). Genuine faith like that is not the domain of
higher order pietists who learned the secrets of the deeper
life, it is characteristic of every one of Christ’s true flock
who ever exists. Pietists think that adding some man made
process to what Christ has provided for all Christians
throughout the centuries can cure a problem that never
existed: being “dead” because of believing the truth. Instead of
a cure, they create an illness as they lead people away from the
finished work of Christ.
This article was
excerpted from
How
Pietism Deceives Christians, an excellent and comprehensive
article on pietism and its dangers.
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