"The
Bible says it is possible to fall away from grace. Even believers
can turn away from God and be forever lost in their sins."
"The
Bible says homosexuality is a perversion of God's moral law
and a deviation from natural human behavior."
"The
Bible says homosexuality is morally acceptable, it is a lifestyle
as viable as any "traditional" concept of marriage
or family."
"The
Bible says long ago God predestined some men and women to everlasting
life, and some to everlasting judgment. We are not free
to accept or reject His salvation."
"The
Bible says God Himself does not know who will choose Him. Salvation
is a matter of free will. The decision is entirely up to us."
"The
Bible says Jesus Christ is the eternal Son of God the Father,
sharing fully in His divinity, and indivisibly united with the
Holy Trinity."
"The
Bible says Jesus Christ is a created being. He is superior to
the angels, but not eternal and not of the same nature as the
Father."
"The
Bible says we should no longer use the terms "Father"
and "Son" in relation to God. They are merely symbolic
and were meant to be replaced with less sexist terminology."
"The
Bible says ..."
Wait
a minute!
How
can so many contradictory statements be based on the teachings
of one book? How can intelligent and sensible people read basically
the same Old and New Testament text, yet arrive at such opposite
conclusions? Is there any other book, ancient or modern, which
has prompted such a vast and often incompatible array of interpretations
and dogmas? Why can't anyone agree on what the Bible really
teaches?
I
believe the time has come for those who love the Holy Scriptures,
no matter what their backgrounds may be, to address such questions
earnestly and sincerely in the name of Christ. No one who
takes seriously Christ's High Priestly Prayer for unity among
His followers in John 17:20, 21 ("I do not pray for these
alone, but also for those who will believe in Me through their
word; that they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and
I in You; that they also may be one in Us, that the world may
believe that You sent Me") can look with indifference upon
the divisions, factions, and schisms which have become synonymous
with contemporary Christianity. Nor can we ignore the crisis
of biblical interpretation which is bringing so much of that
division upon us.
In
the Roman Catholic Church of the late twentieth century, an
increasingly vocal and powerful contingent of theologians, clergy,
and laity began to cry out for changes far more radical than
those of the Reformation. Calling into question Church teachings
concerning the most basic issues of morality, ethics, and traditional
Church dogma, and fanned by the turbulent winds of nineteenth
and early twentieth century liberalism, and furthered by a highly
militant feminism, these factions tore away at the very core
of traditional Catholic beliefs. What effect these forces will
have in shaping Church doctrine in the twenty-first century
remains to be seen.
In
the Protestant world, what began as an attempt by early reformers
such as Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli to purify the Church has
now largely failed to lead God's people to doctrinal purity
and biblical fidelity. Rather, it has resulted all too often
in a narrow-minded and independent sectarianism on the one hand,
or a progressive descent towards novel and often unrecognizably
Christian liberalism on the other. Both elements now simultaneously
wage war upon the modern Protestant Church and have cast her
onto the shores of the twenty-first century divided, confused,
and disoriented. While there are still many who cling faithfully
to the essentials of their particular denomination, severe structural
cracks are now becoming apparent everywhere. Should the Protestant
Church survive the twenty-first century, many fear to think
what appearance it will have assumed?
Never
before in the history of the Christian Faith has there been
such widespread confusion concerning foundational biblical doctrines
such as the nature of the Church, the Holy Trinity, or the essence
of the Christian life. Having lost a consistent approach to
biblical interpretation, modern Christianity has been cut adrift
from its moorings, and now appears to be rapidly drifting out
to a tempestuous sea of subjectivity, shallowness, and heretical
novelty. Like the disciples of Jesus' day who could not
cast out the demons, modern Christianity has seemingly been
outwitted and overpowered by the enemy. Divided and confused,
it is rapidly losing its momentum, while the watching world
either mocks openly, or begins to look elsewhere for answers.
WHAT
HAPPENED?
If,
for the most part, Christians are sincerely looking to the Scriptures
for answers, yet are coming up with a discordant array of interpretations,
there must be some explanation. I believe there is one and only
one-but before discussing it, I would like to mention two commonly
held views, which though understandable in light of the current
chaotic scene, I believe must be rejected at the outset.
1)
Unhealthy Skepticism. Some would say Christians disagree over
the proper interpretation of Scripture because there is no proper
interpretation. These people would claim, "The Bible is
not divinely inspired and has no unified message." Frankly,
who can blame people for being skeptical? With over 22,000 different
Christian denominations and sects in existence today, and with
an average of five new groups appearing each week, almost all
claiming to base their beliefs on the teachings of the Bible,
how could it not appear to those outside the Christian Faith
that the Scriptures have no unity, no underlying theme, and
no divinely inspired message?
To
the skeptic, the spectacle of modern Christianity proves
that the Bible is simply another book of history, a random collection
of religious writings reflecting the sociological development
of a portion of Middle Eastern culture. I obviously don't agree
with that position, but in deference must admit that if I were
on the outside looking in at all this chaos, I might be tempted
to believe it. If you are reading this booklet as a skeptic,
but one who would like to believe there is more to the message
of the Bible than what you might have experienced so far, I
wish to encourage you not to give up. There is more to the story-much
more. Please, keep reading!
2)
Unhealthy Optimism. Others would tell us that although Christians
disagree over the meaning of Scripture, in the final analysis,
doctrine is not really important anyway. They would look upon
the current disharmony among Christians as not a weakness, but
a strength-God's way of teaching us that what a person believes,
or how someone interprets the Bible, is only a matter of personal,
private opinion, and ultimately has little importance or bearing
on one's relationship with God or fellow man. This view says,
"Our responsibility is to make the best of whatever
we have, to respect everyone else's opinion, and not to prefer
our views, or anyone else's views, over our neighbor's. It doesn't
really matter whether someone is Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Christian
Scientist, fundamentalist, or Unitarian. We should simply
live our lives, and stop trying to find out who is `right.'
This view is incompatible with a sincere search for truth.
LOOKING
FOR ANSWERS
All
right, perhaps we are in agreement, at least in principle, that
there is a serious crisis here. There can be no denying that
the spectacle we modern Christians are presenting to the outside
world bears very little resemblance to the picture of unity
and oneness envisioned by Christ in John 17. The most sincere
efforts of Christian biblical interpreters, no matter how intelligent,
how charismatic, how gifted in biblical languages, how well-loved,
or how eloquent, have not been sufficient to quell the confusion
that now exists. In fact, most of them have only added to this
confusion in their own way. Sectarianism, liberalism, and moral
decay are running rampant, and at the present rate of decline,
there will likely be no resemblance whatsoever between the Christianity
we now hold, and Christianity one hundred years from now. (If
you have been a Christian for many years, think back to the
changes which have occurred in your own church since you were
a child in Sunday School!)
Okay,
so where do we go from here?
What
I am about to say, I say with more conviction and firmness
of belief than I have possessed in over thirty years as a student
of the Scriptures. I wish to give a two-word answer to that
question which represents what I unequivocally believe to be
the one and only prospect for Christians who wish to return
to the true message of Scripture and to understand its divine
meaning. Apart from this priceless key to interpretation, the
fragmentation we see around us will continue unabated until
finally there is nothing left of the original Christian
proclamation.
What
I'm about to give you is not just another opinion or idea. It
is our only hope! It's called Holy Tradition.
YOU
MUST BE KIDDING!
"Tradition? Isn't that something the Catholics came up
with to impose a system of non-biblical, authoritarian dogmas
upon people so that they wouldn't read the Bible for themselves?"
If
that statement sounds anywhere close to where you are coming
from, please stay with me for at least the next few pages of
this booklet. There are reasons why you feel that way, and some
of them are valid. But not all of them. What I am about to say
is not an indictment of godly pastors, teachers, parents, or
friends who in sincerity taught you and me our beliefs about
tradition. I was raised in the Baptist Church and in a godly
Christian home, and have the greatest respect for those who
taught me and sought to be examples of how to serve God and
to put Him first in life. I love them, and I thank God for them.
But
they only saw a part of the picture.
HOLY
TRADITION: A BAD RAP
No
one can deny that there is a dangerous and dark side to tradition.
It does not take a Ph.D. in biblical studies to be aware of
the harsh language used in Scripture
against
the legalistic and man-centered traditions of the Pharisees,
or the other empty traditions filtering around during the New
Testament era, against which Saint Paul warns his readers to
be on guard (Colossians 2:8).
Undoubtedly
some of the most harsh language in all Scripture directed toward
this aspect of tradition can be found coming from the mouth
of Jesus Christ Himself in Matthew 15:3-9. He calls the Pharisees
"hypocrites" for nullifying the commandments of God
through their phony traditions, and then goes on to castigate
them by quoting Isaiah's prophecy, "These people draw near
to Me with their mouth, and honor Me with their lips, but their
heart is far from Me. And in vain they worship Me, teaching
as doctrines the commandments of men."
What
Christian in his or her right mind would want to be involved
with something that received such harsh treatment from our Lord
Himself!
But
wait!
Are
we seeing the whole picture? Because something can be misused
and abused, does that necessarily mean it cannot possibly be
used in a proper manner? Take, for instance, the Bible itself.
As we will soon see, godless heretics from the earliest period
of the Church's history, as well as virtually every heretical
cult of our own day, use or have used the Bible as their source
of proof-texts. Does this mean that we should shun the Holy
Scriptures as many people shun Holy Tradition, because the possibility
of misuse exists? I hardly think so!
To
be quite honest, the Bible, while deprecating the dark side
of tradition -- that is, the tradition of men -- speaks quite
highly concerning tradition properly applied. Saint Paul, who
in Colossians 2:8 warns his readers against the one aspect of
tradition, applauds the Corinthian believers for keeping the
traditions he delivered to them concerning conduct in Church
worship (1 Corinthians 11:2). Elsewhere, he strongly exhorts
believers to "stand fast and hold the traditions which
you were taught, whether by word or our epistle" (2 Thessalonians
2:15). Further on in that same book, he applies tradition to
moral conduct in a favorable light when he says, "We command
you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you
withdraw from every brother who walks disorderly and not according
to the tradition which he received from us" (2 Thessalonians
3:6).
What
am I trying to say? That tradition, like the Bible itself, can
be perverted and twisted into something unimaginably ugly
and godless, if that is the intent of those who are using it.
But if we as modern Christians have false preconceptions that
go beyond that realization, and tell us that all tradition is
evil, or that tradition is something to be avoided like the
plague, we need to take a second look at Scripture itself. As
we will soon see, the early Church had no such hang-ups about
tradition-although Christians were most definitely concerned
about differentiating between Holy Tradition and the traditions
of men.
The
Church followed Saint Paul's instruction to Timothy, "the
things that you have heard from me among many witnesses, commit
these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also"
(2 Timothy 2:2). The word tradition means, literally, "to
hand down."
Holy
Tradition speaks of a careful passing on of correct belief and
worship from generation to generation. I will tip my hand before
moving into the next section by saying here that if the early
Church had not been able to come to grips with tradition properly
applied, and if the decay of our own day and age had spun out
of control in the early history of Christianity, without the
safeguard of Holy Tradition to keep the Church from slipping
headlong into heresy, we would not have needed a Protestant
Reformation in the sixteenth century. Why? Because Christianity
would have died in its infancy, wracked and torn apart by conflicting
doctrines and perversions. The Church would have blown away
like dust long before Martin Luther came onto the scene. Or
at best, he would have needed way more than 95 Theses to get
things straightened out!
BUT
ISN'T THE BIBLE SUFFICIENT BY ITSELF?
Okay,
how about another question, and a very valid one at that, which
is often brought up in discussions about tradition. Isn't the
Bible sufficient in and of itself without needing any help?
What about the doctrine of sola scriptura?
To
answer that question, I would like to introduce you to one of
my favorite heroes from the Church's past. His name is Saint
Vincent of Lerins, and he lived and wrote in the fifth century.
Like us, he had a deep and enduring love of the Holy Scriptures.
(Isn't it a shame we modern Christians so easily assume that
we are the only ones to have an interest in God's Word?) Listen
for a moment to his discussion of how to determine true doctrine:
I
have often earnestly approached learned and holy men who knew
Christian doctrine, asking how I can distinguish the truth of
the catholic (universal) Faith from the falsehood of heresy.
In almost every instance, they have told me that if I, or anyone
else, want to detect heresy, avoid the traps set by heretics,
and maintain the true Faith, I must, with the help of the Lord,
reinforce my own belief with two things:
1)
The authority of the Holy Scriptures;
2)
The tradition of the Church.
At
this point someone may wish to ask, "Since the canon of
Scripture is complete and more than sufficient, what need is
there to join the authority of the Church's interpretation
to it?" Good question. But there is a simple answer we
all know if we think a moment: Because of the depth of the Scriptures,
they are not interpreted in the same sense by everyone. One
understands a text to mean one thing, and another thinks it
means another. Sometimes it seems there are as many interpretations
as there are interpreters.... Consequently, because of the intricacies
of all these heresies and incorrect doctrines, we must formulate
our understanding of the writings of the Apostles and prophets
in harmony with the standards of ecclesiastical and orthodox
interpretation. (From The Commentaries, chapter 2, paraphrased
by Fr. Jack N. Sparks).
Aside
from the fact that this passage is so relevant to our contemporary
scene it could have been written yesterday, Saint Vincent's
work is vitally important because it so perfectly summarizes
the need for tradition in the earlier period of the Church
-- earlier, that is, even than Saint Vincent. It was because
of the countless heresies seeking to pervert the Scriptures
that Holy Tradition became so important!
EARLY
"SCRIPTURAL" HERESIES
Let's
take a few steps farther back in time, starting in the first
century, and listen to just a few of the heresies which started
attacking the Church from her earliest times. To understand
these heresies is to understand why the Church, from its inception,
placed such a high degree of emphasis upon the role of Holy
Tradition.
>In
the first century, the Cerinthians, a heretical cult,
taught that the world was formed out of preexistent matter,
possibly by angels. Jesus began His life as a mere man; the
divine power descended upon Him at His baptism, and left Him
before the crucifixion.
>Also
in the first century, the Ebionites taught that Jesus
was only the son of Joseph and Mary. The Holy Spirit came upon
Him at, but not prior to, His baptism.
>In
the second century, the Gnostics came into prominence.
They taught a wide array of philosophical and pseudo-Christian
doctrines, saying, among other things, that there was a distinction
between the God who created matter, and the supreme and unknowable
Divine Being. The world was therefore imperfect and unspiritual.
True knowledge of God could only be obtained through mystical
"gnosis" or knowledge.
>Also
in the second century, the Marcionites taught that the
God of the Old Testament was different from the God of the New
Testament. Jesus, who didn't really have a physical, human body,
came to overthrow this cruel god of law and violence.
>In
the third century, the Novatians, a harsh and legalistic
sect, taught, in part, that the human soul was preexistent,
and that Jesus' soul was united to Jesus, the Word, somewhere
in time prior to His human incarnation.
>Also
in the third century, Sabellius taught that the Godhead
did not consist of three distinct Persons, but that there was
only a succession of modes or operations of one Person.
>In
the fourth century, the infamous heretic Arius taught
that the Son was not equal to or of the same substance as the
Father.
What
a mess! And that is only to name portions of the teachings of
just a few early heresies. Other than the fact that some of
these groups differed as to what books they believed composed
the Old and New Testament, do you know one thing they all
had in common? Just like the Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses
of our day, they all claimed adamantly that these misbegotten
views were the true teaching of Scripture!
SETTING
THE RECORD STRAIGHT
Thank
God, from the earliest period of the Church, going right back
to the Apostles themselves, the true heroes of our Faith fought
tooth and nail against such perversions. No one, not a single
one of them, believed that the Bible needed additional help
to somehow become God's Word. In view of the countless heresies
attacking the Church from the beginning, all of them using Scripture
to make their claims more palatable (in Saint Vincent's words,
heretics sprinkle the perfume of heavenly language upon their
doctrines, because they are "quite aware that the evil
smell of their doctrines will never be accepted if their
nasty vapors are released undisguised"), it was sincere
Christians who needed the help-desperately. There had to be
some way to distinguish truth from error in those crucially
formative years of the Church. One thing wouldn't work, for
sure: letting everyone draw his own conclusions about what
the Bible really meant!
One
of the earliest and most important "yardsticks" the
early Christians used to determine precisely the core essentials
of true doctrine was their baptismal formulations. What was
it that catechumens coming for Christian baptism were proclaiming
they believed? In the face of all that wrong doctrine, what
were the essentials of the Church's saving and biblical Faith?
Baptismal formulations, concise, carefully worded statements
of faith (such as the Apostle's Creed, whose roots go back to
the second century) became one of the earliest forms of tradition.
They were the Church's way of protecting new catechumens who
came seeking salvation in Christ. Because of these baptismal
creeds, the Church was able to say, "These are the essentials
of apostolic teaching. This is how true Christians understand
the Scriptures concerning vitally important points of belief.
This is what you must believe to be a Christian."
I
simply do not have time in the course of one short booklet to
go into further depth concerning the history of tradition in
the early Church. However, I will say that one of the most encouraging
studies I have ever embarked upon in my entire life has been
to examine the teachings of men like Irenaeus, Tertullian, Hilary
of Poitiers, Athanasius, and Basil the Great concerning this
subject. As one born "after the bomb," so to speak,
someone whose only experience of biblical interpretation has
been that of the contemporary din of conflicting and contradictory
opinions, this study has been like discovering a sweet oasis
in the midst of a parched desert. Finally, I have found godly
men who agree on the essentials of interpretation!
I
will also say by way of summary that for these men, and in fact
for all the great heroes of the early Church, the Scriptures
were never looked upon as something to be stripped away and
interpreted in isolation from the Church. That is what the heretics
did. For early Christians, the Bible was most naturally understood
in the context of the Church, that community of believers, both
living and departed, who believed, taught, and, most importantly,
worshiped in accordance with what the Apostles had received
from the Lord Himself. For early Christians, that kind of faithful
tradition, that "Rule of Faith," was the interpretation
of Scripture.
THE
MAKE-UP OF TRADITION
The
most important aspect of Holy Tradition, the New Testament,
was still in its developmental stage throughout the entire
period of the first century. The Holy Scriptures, God's infallible
and unerring word delivered through the Apostles, stand
alone and without rival. Orthodox theologian Bishop Kallistos
Ware speaks for all Christendom when he says, "The Bible
is the supreme expression of God's revelation to man."
People
from my evangelical background have bent over backwards to "hold
fast" to this vital facet of Holy Tradition. A person could
not consider himself to be evangelical if he did not read the
Scriptures regularly, attend a Bible-believing Church where
the Scriptures were both preached and practiced, and spend
time meditating upon the message of Holy Writ.
And
who among the early Fathers would disagree with that sentiment?
Saint Jerome wrote that "ignorance of the Scriptures
is ignorance of Christ." Saint Athanasius called those
who neglect the Scriptures "worthy of utmost condemnation."
And Saint John Chrysostom said that not knowing the Scriptures
is "the cause of all evils."
But
tragically, somewhere in the white-heat intensity of the
"Battle for the Bible," many Christians have entirely
overlooked the rest of Holy Tradition. Indeed, to badly misquote
a verse in Acts, many evangelicals today would say in all honesty,
"We have not even heard whether there is such a thing as
Holy Tradition."
Besides
the Scriptures, I've already mentioned one other important aspect
of Holy Tradition, the early baptismal formulations. What are
some of the other elements of tradition?
1)
Councils and Creeds. As the Church grew and matured, the need
often arose for local, regional, and even ecumenical-universal-gatherings
of orthodox pastors, bishops, theologians, and godly leaders,
to establish true biblical and historical doctrine in answer
to heretical claims of the day. They gathered to decide, again
with the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, what the Bible really
taught about those issues. And to make sure that their decisions
were really biblical, they made extreme efforts to follow the
consistent teaching of the godly faithful who had gone before.
By far the most important of the creeds coming out of these
councils is the Nicene Creed (or more technically, the Nicene-Constantinopolitan
Creed), which is recited at every celebration of the Liturgy
in the Orthodox Church. It states the absolute essentials of
Christian Faith and belief as understood by the unified early
Church.
2)
The Liturgical Life of the Church. It is fascinating to read
a later Church Father, Saint Basil (fourth century), as he defends
biblical Orthodoxy against the pseudo-Biblicism of the Arians,
who were masters at twisting Scripture. Of course, Saint Basil
reasons from Scripture. But knowing the craftiness of his enemies,
and how treacherous they were at proof-texting their absurd
teachings, Saint Basil also invokes another powerful witness
to, in this case, the true teaching concerning the Holy Spirit:
the liturgical formulations -- the patterns of worship -- of
the Church from her inception. "Do you want to know what
Christians believe about something?" to paraphrase Saint
Basil's argument. "Take a look at what they do and proclaim
in their worship." When you stop to think about it, isn't
it not only logical, but even a matter of piety, to believe
that the same Holy Spirit who guided the writers of Scripture
should also guide the Church in the development of her worship?
The Church's liturgical and prayer life is a powerful element
of Holy Tradition.
3)
The Teaching of the Fathers and Lives of the Saints. I have
never witnessed a martyr being tortured and killed for his or
her faith. The early Church, however, had abundant opportunity
to witness such spectacles. Is it any wonder that the writings
of these martyrs, along with the writings of those who "fought
the good fight" to the finish, who maintained true belief
while others fell away, were looked upon with reverence and
respect? Evangelicals today look to and trust respected Church
leaders of our own era for sound Bible teaching and worthwhile
instruction and edification. Why is it so difficult to give
that kind of respect and honor to early heroes of the Faith
-- men and women who started, and finished the race? I wish
that more of our "modern heroes" would do what all
early Fathers and saints did to warrant the respect and admiration
of their followers: make absolutely sure that what they are
teaching squares with what faithful Christians have believed
throughout the years. To be a "hero" to someone, and
to teach new and radically differing doctrine in the guise that
this is what "the Bible says," is a cruel deception
and a lie. G. K. Chesterton defined tradition as "giving
your ancestors a vote."
4)
Continuing Tradition. Also included under the banner of tradition
could be mentioned, with varying degrees of importance and universality:
the decisions of later councils, canon law, and finally the
iconographic tradition of the Church. In fact, one of the most
exciting things about tradition is that it never stops or remains
static. Tradition is the continuing presence of the Holy Spirit
in the Church. We do not simply observe tradition, we enter
into it, are swept up by it, and in the process become a part
of its ebb and flow.
SCRIPTURE
AND TRADITION
For
early Christians, there was no false dichotomy such as we see
today between the Bible and Holy Tradition. In the intensity
of unimaginably crucial battles for the Faith, when forces within
and without were threatening to tear apart and silence forever
the message proclaimed by Christ and passed down through His
disciples, the Church looked gratefully to both Scripture and
Holy Tradition to find balance and to maintain equilibrium.
It was never an "either/or" option. Both Scripture
and Holy Tradition were received as having been given to the
Church by God Himself, the source of all wisdom, through the
direct operation of the Holy Spirit.
The
battles of our own era are no less fierce than those of the
Church's early history. In the midst of a fragmented and hopelessly
divided Christian proclamation of the early twenty-first century,
with a myriad of groups and individuals claiming to know the
true meaning of Scripture, yet disagreeing radically with one
another and often proclaiming new and dangerously novel doctrines,
the battle for faith is, in fact, intensifying on a daily basis.
What will be the outcome of this tremendous struggle?
Thank
God, there is still time for a return to the balanced and Spirit-filled
understanding of the Holy Scriptures, as guided by the light
of Holy Tradition. If we are willing to lay aside our modern
prejudices and return to the consistent and clear message of
the Bible, understood through the clarifying lens of Holy Tradition,
our chances of surviving the current crisis increase tremendously.
In fact, the very gates of hell will not prevail against us.
As
the Bible says, "Therefore, brethren, stand fast and hold
the traditions which you were taught, whether by word or our
epistle. Now may our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, and our God
and Father, who has loved us and given us everlasting consolation
and good hope by grace, comfort your hearts and establish you
in every good word and work" (2 Thessalonians 2:15-17).
And
God's people answered: AMEN!