Encouraging: Some Think Tchividjian’s Latest post is “Shocking”
“Mainline evangelicals have never, never, never, never, never, never, believed in sanctification by faith alone, period. GS props claim that Walter Marshall (the Puritan) held to this and called it ‘definitive sanctification,’ but trust me, I will be checking into that.”
I have received two links on Tullian Tchividjian’s latest post “Reminders Are More Effective Than Rebukes.” After clicking on the first link and reading the post, I decided that unraveling TT’s usual nuanced double-speak in the article for purposes of a review would be too time consuming. Let me give you an example: when GS propogators protest being “falsely accused” by saying, “What! That’s ridiculous! Of course we believe that the law has a place in the Christian life,” they know you will assume they are using “law” as a collective noun in the plural form rather than how they really mean it; the singular “law of love” or “higher law of Christ” that replaced Bible imperatives. Hence, “the law” as in—the one law. This is also known as being “in-lawed” to / with Christ. In other words, Christ came to fulfill the law (plural) and replace it with the single law of love.
But the second link came with a comment that the article was “shocking.” It is encouraging to be reminded that there are still Christians out there that are shocked by anything being taught these days. The usual is more like, “Hey dude, you won’t believe what I learned today.” What? “Like, God gives us delight before we get saving faith.” Really? So Galatians 3:2 really reads, ‘Did you receive the Spirit by works of the law or hearing with delight?’ “Oh ya, for sure bro, because like, in the Bible, faith and delight are synonymous.” Your right, I don’t believe it. “Chill bro-daddy, Mac wrote the forward to the book—it’s all good.” Good grief!
So, roll up my sleeves and blog I must. TT’s thesis is that accountability groups are bad for the following reasons:
“Are you tired of being told that if you’re really serious about God, you must be in an “accountability group?” You know the ones I’m talking about. The ones where you and a small group of “friends” arrange for a time each week to get together and pick each other apart–uncovering layer after layer after layer of sin? The ones where all parties involved believe that the guiltier we feel the more holy we are? The ones where you confess your sin to your friends but it’s never enough? No matter what you unveil, they’re always looking for you to uncover something deeper, darker, and more embarrassing than what you’ve fessed up to. It’s usually done with such persistent invasion that you get the feeling they’re desperately looking for something in you that will make them feel better about themselves.”
Actually, TT may be (unwittingly) referring to a tenet of New Calvinism that he is a part of called “deep repentance.” It is the belief that the more sin you find and repent of, the larger the void will be in your “heart” that will be filled by Christ, and thereby empowering the believer accordingly. It is a “filling of Christ” rather than a filling of the Holy Spirit, but that’s another post. I am unaware of where TT stands on the “practical applications” of Gospel Sanctification, but his complaint sounds like an element of heart theology, one of the four major tenets of the movement. Therefore, it makes sense that he would hear such things among New Calvinist for that reason. Also, many followers of GS, even leaders, have not thought through all of the logical implications of the doctrine.
TT continues,
“The real reason, however, that I hate the kind of ‘accountability groups’ described above is because the primary (almost exclusive, in my experience) focus is always on our sin, not on our Savior. Because of this, these groups breed self-righteousness, guilt, and the almost irresistible temptation to pretend–to be less than honest. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been in ‘accountability groups’ where there has been little to no attention given to the gospel whatsoever. There’s no reminder of what Christ has done for our sin–’cleansing us from its guilt and power’–and the resources that are already ours by virtue of our union with him. These groups produce a ‘do more, try harder’ moralism that robs us of the joy and freedom Jesus paid dearly to secure for us. They start with the narcissistic presupposition that Christianity is all about cleaning up and getting better–it’s all about personal improvement.”
That depends on what kind of accountability group he is talking about. Deep repentance accountability groups don’t propose that you make any effort at all to do anything about the sin that has been confessed. The idea is all about what TT, himself teaches! Let me explain. TT believes that we grow spiritually by “moving deeper and deeper into the gospel,” not being saved by the gospel and then “moving on to something else.” Well then, what are the only two things that you can do to be saved? Answer: faith and repentance, right? Well then, likewise, sanctification is by faith and repentance alone. In fact, GS accountability groups believe the exact opposite of whatever type of accountability group TT is complaining about. They believe that acting on repentance breeds a self-righteous attitude, whereas deep repentance breeds a broken, total dependence on Christ. So, the more sin you find, the better, because that keeps you humble and totally dependent on Christ; plus, it’s what empowers you as a believer. When GS advocates talk about “accountability,” this is what they really mean, which of course is just another example of their deception in regard to borrowing orthodox terms.
So, what’s going on here? GS proponents often build straw Godzillas to plead their case. Example: John Piper constantly paints a picture of mainline evangelicals supposedly teaching that happiness in the Christian life is not important. I have been an evangelical for thirty years and have never heard any evangelical teach such a thing. Furthermore, in thirty years, I have had friends who always stood ready to hold me accountable, but I have never heard of any “accountability groups.” That sounds like a GS thing, and TT may be assuming that the groups he is talking about expect people to follow-up on confession with action or effort. Such is not the case. Really, if GS propagators were honest, they would call the tenet “deep confession,” because any effort to “turn from,” is not in the mix.
TT continues:
“Ironically, when we (or our “friends”) focus mostly on our need to get better we actually get worse. We become neurotic and self-absorbed. Preoccupation with my guilt over God’s grace makes me increasingly self-centered and morbidly introspective. Real Christian growth, according to Jeremiah Bourroughs (1600-1646), “comes not so much from our struggling and endeavors and resolutions, as it comes flowing to us from our union with him.”
TT must know a little bit of GS history because he quotes a Puritan. This is standard GS procedure that sends the following message: “No, no, we have been around waaaay longer than 1980—see, the Puritans believed this stuff too.” Regardless of all the quotes presented by various Puritans, nobody has yet produced a Puritan quote anything near this statement: “We must preach the gospel to ourselves everyday.” Furthermore, Puritan authors and writings are practically innumerable, but yet, GS props primarily quote Walter Marshall and a few others like Bourroughs. Even if these few believed anything like GS, they would constitute a ridiculously low percentage of Puritan representation. Additionally, I have original copies of books from that era and assume they are translated into modern English for readability, which makes original intent questionable to begin with. Anyway, this whole GS endeavor to find credibility in Puritan literature because such credibility cannot be found in the Bible is just too rich, and is an area that I am researching via the encouragement and help from a reader. I might also mention that Dr. Peter Masters has called-out Piper on this issue as well.
In regard to TT’s concern over guilt and morbid introspection, GS advocates do not believe we are obligated to keep the law to begin with, so why the guilt? This is probably just another straw Godzilla. Anywhere you poke this article results in goo coming out and I really don’t want to write a book here, but let me at least mention that the article is saturated with blatant contradictions to the plain sense of Scripture, so let’s move on to the smoking gun items.
Ok, if you have made it this far, this is really what we need to focus on:
“Christianity is not first about our getting better, our obedience, our behavior, and our daily victory over remaining sin–as important as all these are. It’s first about Jesus! It’s about his person and subsitutionary work–his incarnation, life, death, resurrection, ascension, session, and promised return. We are justified–and sanctified–by grace alone through faith alone in the finished work of Christ alone. So that even now, the banner under which Christians live reads, ‘It is finished.’”
This rich statement is fraught with the heart of GS dogma. First, we see the postmodern side of GS doctrine: “It’s first about Jesus! It’s about his person….” Let me make this point from “The truth War” where MacArthur disses all of his friends unawares. This is what he says about postmodern thought on page 14: “If truth is personal [‘….It’s about his person….’] it cannot be propositional. If truth is embodied in the person of Christ [emphasis mine], then the form of a proposition can’t possibly express authentic truth. That is why most of Scripture is told to us in narrative form [the premise of redemptive-historical hermeneutics]-as a story—not as a set of propositions.”
This idea was also the thesis behind John Piper’s keynote address at the T4GS 2010 conference, and if I’m not mistaken, Mac was sitting in the audience. Really, these guys are just killin’ me. But from a practical standpoint, if the focus is on Christ’s personhood (whatever that means), instead of what Christ says, then all bets are off; you have moved from the objective to the subjective and you can teach anything you want to. This also explains the relationships and fellowship that “mainline evangelicals” have with postmoderns like Mark Driscoll that raises controversy from time to time. And to add to the deception, some GS churches have seminars that oppose the emergent church movement. It’s truly a chaotic spectacle.
Secondly, we see the totally unorthodox element of sanctification by faith alone in “ We are justified–and sanctified–by grace alone through faith alone in the finished work of Christ alone.” Mainline evangelicals have never, never, never, never, never, never, believed in sanctification by faith alone, period. GS props claim that Walter Marshall (the Puritan) held to this and called it “definitive sanctification,” but trust me, I will be checking into that.
Thirdly, we see the GS element of monergistic substitutionary sanctification in “….sanctified….in the finished work of Christ alone.” This is the idea that past, present, and future active obedience was part of the atonement. TT adorns this idea throughout the same article (“And what is the gospel? Not my work for Jesus, but Jesus’ work for me.” Notice the present tense of his statement). Christ died for our sins and imputed his righteousness to us, but the Scriptures do not teach that He also died for our active obedience so that He could obey for us and in our place.
Fourthly, it is easy to conclude from point two and three that TT’s gospel presentation would not include repentance. This is an obvious GS reality propagated by the likes of Michael Horton and others. At least once in this article, TT refers to the gospel as an “announcement” as opposed to what Jesus Himself called the gospel: a “call[ed].” Again, this is a Michael Horton staple, the whole gospel as indicative announcement only and not a calling. Like most GS error, it is very subtle, but nevertheless, just as deadly as the most grievous of error. This is a half gospel of Christ as savior only, and not Lord.
Lastly, this post is four pages and I have not even scratched the surface. The article by TT is a theological train wreck. And my parting comment is this—this hideous doctrine was at the core of the hostile takeover of Coral Ridge where he is now the “pastor.”
paul
Matthew 25:14-29: More is at Stake Than Semantics Concerning Sanctification
Jay Adams wrote the following helpful words in a recent post:
“There are two ways to serve the Lord, only one of which actually renders service that He approves. One way is to have an intellectually correct view of what God requires and then to make an attempt to fulfill the requirements. The other way is to gain an equally correct view of what God requires and then tell Him that you cannot fulfill the requirements. The latter view is the proper one.
But, of course, it is not enough to tell the Lord that you can’t do what He requires. That, admission must be followed immediately by your acknowledgment that He can, and is willing to, enable you to do so by His Spirit, which in turn must be followed by your request for such help.
God blesses the humble, who acknowledge their own insufficiency. But He never takes that as an excuse for failing to meet His requirements. He has provided all we need for life and godliness, so no excuse is valid. On the other hand, we will not be given that for which we do not humbly ask.
So, a proper balancing of biblical truth is necessary: we cannot/we can—on our own/with His help. So, believer, in serving God, we serve well when we serve Him in our insufficiency fully aided by His sufficiency. Even Jesus, the all-sufficient One ministered under the power of the Holy Spirit. True godly service is that which involves both the human and the divine.”
True, and very helpful words for understanding. I would only add that our “human” involvement does include effort, or as JC Ryle states it: “exertion.” And why not? Unlike worldly endeavors, our efforts are guaranteed to yield positive results when we depend on Him and follow His ways of doing things. It is storing up treasures in heaven rather than where thieves steal and moths corrupt. “’I’ can do all things through Him who strengthens me” (Phil 4:13). What a wonderful verse! It is a staple verse in my relationship with Susan. We don’t even waste time saying, “Well, I’ll try,” when one of us confronts the other about changes we need to make in our lives, knowing that the Phil 4:13 reminder will be immediately implemented. Also, when we don’t “feel” like we have the will to do God’s bidding, that’s false as well according to Phil 2:13. God will always grant the will. As Dr. Adams states above, no excuses.
In Matthew 25:14-29, Christ speaks of a servant who offered an excuse rather than service. Christ calls the servant “lazy,” which is the antithesis of work. The servant did not work in his spiritual life. God enables according to the gifts given; this is another truth that can be born-out here, but obviously, work on our part is still required. And we would do well to strongly consider the end result: “And throw that worthless servant outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”
Though Jay’s post deals with sanctification and this passage of Scripture deals with justification as can be ascertained by the last statement cited by Christ, the post offers helpful insights to hang our thoughts on. Jay speaks of trying to do things right without depending on Christ, and knowing what is right, and not doing it. Both will lead to God’s “[dis]approval” or loss of reward. But what of the belief that we can’t work in the sanctification process, with or without God’s enablement? Now, I’m not going to speculate on an articulation of the servants thinking, but nonetheless, we can conclude that it was derived from an inaccurate assessment of God’s law, ie., what the Lord expects, and the false assessment resulted in him not working for the lord, ie., spiritual laziness. Working off of Jay’s helpful prism, this is wrong information (or, in essence, a misinterpretation of the law) leading to wrong behavior and self-deception, not the use of right information implemented in the wrong way, ie., a self-dependent / non-humble attitude.
So, when presenting the gospel, is it a true presentation if the Lord’s expectations are not accurately presented? What if we are told that we are not saved by the law (true), that we can’t keep the law (true), and that the law has no role in our relationship to God because it has been abrogated by whatever “feels like love” (not true: Francis Chan,“Crazy Love”p. 110). What if the presentation says that the gospel is strictly a “proclamation” and not something to be “followed” (not true: Michael Horton, “Modern Reformation” Nov. / Dec. Vol.15 No.6 2006 pages 6-9) even though Christ said “follow me,” and what He was referring to was “teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded”?
Again, I am not going to make any judgments regarding what the exact thinking of the servant was, but there is another safe conclusion that can be drawn: the servant was playing it safe. In his mind, he was erring on the side of safety (“I was afraid and went out and hid your gold in the ground. See, here is what belongs to you”), but to his horrible detriment. In our day, has the law of God been so misrepresented that we think to avoid it is to error on the side of safety? I think so. The belief that Jesus obeys for us—is that playing it safe because we can supposedly give Him all of the glory? Is the belief that all of the imperatives in the Bible are “indicative” of what Christ has done and not anything required of us indicative of that belief? Absolutely.
Lack of dependance on God can lead to non-humbleness in two different ways: lack of dependance in works, but also lack of dependance on God in understanding—leading to spiritual laziness. The slothful servant made the fatal error of leaning on his own understanding:
“His master replied, ‘You wicked, lazy servant! So you knew that I harvest where I have not sown and gather where I have not scattered seed? 27 Well then, you should have put my money on deposit with the bankers, so that when I returned I would have received it back with interest.”
The servant misunderstood the Lord’s expectations, and didn’t even understand the best course of action based on the wrong information, that is another safe assumption. Is a gospel presentation void of repentance, and the standard of repentance, a valid gospel presentation? I doubt it. Telling people that any effort on our part to represent the gospel with our behavior is trying to “be the gospel” rather than presenting the gospel (Michael Horton, “Christless Christianity” pages 117-119) regardless of what 1Peter 2:12 and 3:1,2 clearly states—is that instruction that does not lean on biblical understanding and leads to spiritual laziness? Definitely.
Gospel sanctification must be contended against because it is clearly a false gospel; more is at stake than semantics concerning sanctification.
paul
The Gospel Sanctification / Sonship Information Network
Again, thanks to those sending information to this ministry. The stories are the same; faithful Bereans searching the Scriptures themselves, sometimes for two years or longer, because their leaders would not be forthcoming concerning what they were spoon-feeding their congregations. This is the arrogance of GS leaders, withholding the whole truth until their (supposedly) spiritually inferior congregants are “ready” for the whole “truth.” Hence, they know themselves that the doctrine would be rejected out-of-hand if not gradually assimilated into what they are feeding parishioners. This is an across-the-board GS mode of operation that creates heavy-handed leadership and a cult-like atmosphere in many churches.
Some are sending information about the attitude of our spiritual kin concerning law and gospel. I am deeply indebted to one individual for introducing me to the writings of Walter Chantry. The book that was recommended to me should be arriving tomorrow. Apparently, Chantry’s implications in the book concerning NCT didn’t sit well with Reisinger and Zen—a very good sign. And Trust me (after reading Chantry’s “Today’s Gospel”), Chantry’s view of law and gospel doesn’t agree with Michael Horton either.
Also, a huge problem for the GS crowd is the novelty factor. Evangelicals have a hard time swallowing the idea that the church has been in the dark until 1980. Their (GS profs) disingenuous response is to claim Walter Marshall, Luther, and John Owen held to their views on sanctification. One reader is going to share some research possibly indicating that Walter Marshall’s writings were altered in a book about his supposed views on sanctification. Readers are also referring me to several people who were at ground level of the Sonship movement and were apposed to it, and I am hoping to personally interview those people in preparation for my chapter book on GS, which will articulate the history of the movement.
Almost everyone is saying, “You probably already know this but….” No! I haven’t been privy to any of it, keep it coming! The information is also great blog material, but I will not mention any sources by name unless it is a source that is already public. But, because I am a layman, and scratching out time for research is difficult, the information is invaluable. I am hoping for Feedback on the limited edition essay book to aid in the writing of the chapter book as well.
As you can see, the information coming in contends against bits and pieces of the movement. The goal of this network is to reveal the connection between all of these bits and pieces. You can also see the perplexity of some that certain respected individuals are doing this, that, or the other (inviting certain individuals to their conferences etc.). I find the perplexity concerning John Piper, especially Steve Camps piece, adorable. However, though there are many complicated pieces, the primary foundation is Sonship Theology which was not widely accepted by evangelicals until proponents changed to the “gospel” nomenclature. Therefore, the goal is also to identify the doctrine with the identity from which it came as a way to remove its cover.
In all, lest we forget: this is all driven by the conviction that doctrine determines what a life looks like, and unbiblical prescriptions for living the kingdom life must be contended against. That is love for others.
paul
Ice Skates in Hell and MacArthur’s White Witches
Has there ever been a bigger fan of John MacArthur Jr. than myself?
….I doubt it, but I guess we all have our Achilles heel, and with MacArthur it has been a serious lack of discernment over the years. Seems unbelievable when you consider his gargantuan contribution to Christianity. That’s why I didn’t believe what I heard in 1986 when I discovered, after just finishing “Inside Out” by Dr. Larry Crabb, that disciples of Crabb were running MacArthur’s counseling program at Grace Community Church. Crabb’s utter disdain for a literal approach to the Scriptures was evident in IO, comparing Scripture reading to a form of escapism “[like] masturbation” (p. 74: but Crabb also wrote statements concerning the inability of God’s word to effect “real change” on pages, 14, 15, 24 twice, 34, 37, 41, 43, 45 twice, 48, 89, 103, 120, 153, 157, 160, 177, 193, and 195). A former close friend of mine who was well acquainted with Mac told me sometime in 1988 that Mac had informed him that Grace Community Church had been “de-Crabbed.” I thought, “Ah, that explains it. GCC is a big church and he was probably busy writing a book or something; but boy, when he found out, those guy’s were outta there!” Not exactly; in fact, MacArthur and his staff had been repeatedly warned about Crabb’s theology, but apparently esteemed the protestants as less credible than Baalam’s donkey.
That brings me to the post someone sent me yesterday comparing Mac to the standard for solid evangelicalism. Ironically, the post was a contention concerning John Piper, a well documented close friend of Mac:
“Do you think there’s any chance whatsoever that the aforementioned Dr. John MacArthur would ever find himself listed there; [among heretics quoted favorably by Piper and endorsed by him] well, maybe about the time ice skates become standard issue in Hell.”
http://apprising.org/2010/06/16/questions-concerning-dr-john-piper/
Well my friend, then that would be the case. Despite outrageous, grossly unorthodox statements made by Piper and documented by men like Craig W. Booth ( http://thefaithfulword.org/wakeupcall.html ), MacArthur goes out of his way to grant Piper creditability at every turn. Unbelievably, Mac wrote the glowing forward to Piper’s theological Alice in Wonderland, “Desiring God,” and quotes Piper at least twice in his latest book, “Slave.” MacArthur also quotes Douglas Moo on page 142 who is one of the fathers of New Covenant Theology. A group of Master’s Seminary professors did a “Hey, NCT is kinda wrong but its propagators are really nice guys” series in, um, “contention” against NCT. Mac also quotes (in “Slave”) gospel sanctification guru Wayne Grudem.
Also, apparently skate-bent on getting a heretic for a keynote speaker at the 2007 Shepard’s conference, MacArthur invited CJ Mahaney, a (are you ready for this?) “Reformed Charismatic” to speak in Piper’s place. Also apparent is that CJ must not be like those wicked Charismatics Mac wrote about in “Charismatic Chaos,” but must be one of the good Charismatics running about. It reminds me of a blind date my step-son Ben had. Upon arrival, she introduced herself as a witch, but told him not to worry for she was a “white witch” (the good ones), not a “black witch”(the bad ones). Ben, not even a graduate of Master’s, didn’t buy it and soon left after some cordial conversation.
Also treading ice to replace the Crabb fiasco is the recently installed “Resolve” conferences which are part of the ministry repertoire at GCC. Here is what Dr. Peter Masters thinks of it:
“ Resolved is the brainchild of a member of Dr John MacArthur’s pastoral staff, [Rick Holland] gathering thousands of young people annually, and featuring the usual mix of Calvinism and extreme charismatic-style worship….[regarding a fixture / speaker at Resolved conferences (every year thus far),CJ Mahaney]….Charismatic in belief and practice, he appears to be wholly accepted by the other big names who feature at the ‘new Calvinist’ conferences, such as John Piper, John MacArthur, Mark Dever, and Al Mohler. Evidently an extremely personable, friendly man, C J Mahaney is the founder of a group of churches blending Calvinism with charismatic ideas, and is reputed to have influenced many Calvinists to throw aside cessationist views.”
Masters also commented on “Together for the Gospel” (T4G) which MacArthur also indorses:
“A final sad spectacle reported with enthusiasm in the book [Masters used information from Young, Restless, Reformed, by Collin Hansen] is the Together for the Gospel conference, running from 2006. A more adult affair convened by respected Calvinists, this nevertheless brings together cessationists and non-cessationists, traditional and contemporary worship exponents, and while maintaining sound preaching, it conditions all who attend to relax on these controversial matters, and learn to accept every point of view. In other words, the ministry of warning is killed off, so that every -error of the new scene may race ahead unchecked. These are tragic days for authentic spiritual faithfulness, worship and piety.”
Masters also comments on a prevalent mentality within the movement:
“The author of the book is a young man (around 26 when he wrote it) who grew up in a Christian family and trained in secular journalism. We are indebted to him for the readable and wide-reaching survey he gives of this new phenomenon, [neo-Calvinism] but the scene is certainly not a happy one…. Collin Hansen contends that American Calvinism collapsed at the end of the nineteenth century and was maintained by only a handful of people until this great youth revival, but his historical scenario is, frankly, preposterous. “
And Masters, in part, concludes with this: “The new Calvinism is not a resurgence but an entirely novel formula which strips the doctrine of its historic practice, and unites it with the world.”
MacArthur’s list of white witches is getting longer every year, and it seems to be effecting his theology as well. Mac has always taught with a superb balance of the vertical and horizontal, but in recent years, his teachings have become overly vertical, following in the way of John Piper who’s teachings offer little, or no practical application of the Scriptures. It’s all about “beholding as a way of becoming.” Notice in his book, “Slave” that he masterfully articulates what it is to be a slave to Christ, (what it looks like) but includes very little biblical information on how to apply that reality to our lives. However, admittedly, it could be my own incorrect interpretation because I no longer trust Mac because of his associations. There is just too much creepiness in all of this, like the syrupy interview conducted by antinomian / mystic Justin Taylor who interviewed Mac and Piper regarding how they became friends. It was a shameless, “see—Piper is orthodox” infomercial conducted by an individual (Taylor) who had a book of essays written and published to praise Piper. Of course, a team of wild horses could not have pulled Mac away from contributing to the book.
So, does Mac think his legacy is safe? Yes, maybe he has accomplished so much that he can now let his guard down. But what about Jimmy Swaggart? Unfair Comparison? I don’t know; compromise with a harlot, or compromising the truth from a lofty position given by the Lord, which is worse? Hmmmm. Oh, hold on, my phone is ringing: “Hi Ben! Your kidding? No, he is happily married. Ok, I’ll hold…. Uh, ok, hmmm, gee, I don’t know, I will try to find out. Ok, bye.”
It was Ben. The white witch called him. She wants to know if Rick Holland is married.
paul

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