Paul's Passing Thoughts

Horton’s Systematic Theology Adds To The Sonship/Gospel Sanctification Massive Subculter

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on April 22, 2011

[NOTE: This was written before I discovered that New Calvinism is in fact the same gospel that the Reformers taught. The resurgence movement began as COG in 1970, became Sonship circa 1986, Gospel Transformation in 2000, dubbed Gospel Sanctification by detractors in 2007, and finally New Calvinism in 2008. This was also written before I understood that orthodoxy is a part of spiritual caste in general]. 

“Gospel Sanctification,  as Sonship is now called, will begin to totally rewrite orthodox Christianity”  [Note also that I no longer equate “orthodoxy ” with truth per se].

[Further revision: much has been learned since this post, but the general idea is very accurate: the Neo-Calvinist movement is seeking to develop a subculture within American culture that will eventually, if all goes as planned, devour American culture as we know it. This is part and parcel with Calvinism’s dominion theology. This post submits a sketchy framework of useful categories under the general idea. For instance, one college that focuses strictly on the Neo-Calvinist vision is a far cry from the fact that this movement owns (in an intellectual capacity) most of the seminaries in America. Other categories could also be added.   

The Fix is now in. The false doctrine of the centrality of the objective gospel (COG) which found new life in  Sonship Theology about thirty years ago—now has its own theology, hermeneutic, practical application, defined experience, ecumenical (inclusiveness) movement, history, college, counseling organization, missionary organization, Bible—and now, its own systematic theology. Gospel Sanctification (GS), as Sonship is now called, will begin to totally rewrite orthodox Christianity. It won’t be long; those who we minister to will have to be deprogrammed before we can help them, starting with convincing them that the Bible is to be taken as literal instruction from God as our authority for ministry and life. Not understanding GS beforehand will make any attempt to help people with the word of God—dead on arrival. GS

Theology

The movement started with a very powerful concept in the minds of its perpetrators. Supposedly, we grow spiritually by revisiting the gospel that saved us every day. Proponents were convinced (and still are) that this thesis stands alone as truth; therefore, all other propositions must bow to it.

The GS Hermeneutic

A literal interpretation of Scripture will continually contradict GS. So, the proponents have changed how we read/ interpret the Bible accordingly. The GS hermeneutic is an interpretive prism that will always yield results that make GS plausible. Unlike the rest of the elements (which are very contemporary), the hermeneutic (known as Biblical Theology or Redemptive-Historical hermeneutics) was borrowed from times past. It originated in Germany under the liberal teaching and writings of Johann Philipp Gabler (1753-1826), who emphasized the historical nature of the Bible over against a “dogmatic” interpretation thereof. Nearly a century later, Geerhardus Vos (1862-1949) was instrumental in taking the discipline of biblical theology in a, supposedly, more conservative direction. Graeme Goldsworthy tweaked the doctrine to facilitate COG, and today, Goldsworthy’s “Trilogy” is the pillar of interpretation within the movement.

Practical Application

The GS narrow approach to sanctification must be embellished and applicable to life in some way in order to be sold. This is Heart Theology, and was developed through David Powlison’s Dynamics of Biblical Change at Westminster Seminary. In 1996, two former students of Powlison articulated Heart Theology in a book entitled, “How People Change.”

Defined Experience

John Piper seeks to articulate how Sonship is experienced via Christian Hedonism. Because GS makes our works and the work of the Spirit an either/or issue, someone needed to develop a thesis that explained how the difference can be ascertained. John Piper answered the call with the development of Christian Hedonism.

Ecumenical Bent

GS now encompasses any group that agrees with its primary view of plenary monergism and the synthesis of justification and sanctification. All other disciplines are seen as secondary and irrelevant to fellowship and joint ventures. The Gospel Coalition (holding national conferences on odd years, 2011, etc.), and T4G (Together For The Gospel, holding national conferences on even years) work together to promote GS/S while promoting inclusiveness among denominations and religions.

History

GS proponents claim a historical precedent dating back to Creation, and also claim to be the second part of the first Reformation. Of course, this is laughable. Sonship, the Antioch school, TGC, T4G, NCT, CH, and HT have no historical precedent prior to 1970. Many of the notable proponents of GS are associated in some way with the father of  Sonship Theology, Dr. John “Jack” Miller. Tim Keller and David Powlison were followers of Miller. Paul Tripp and Timothy Lane are followers of David Powlison. Jerry Bridges attributes his view of the gospel to Miller as well.

College

The Antioch School of leadership training has GS as its foundation and basis for training. It is located in Ames, Iowa.

Counseling Organization

The upstart Biblical Counseling Coalition, which seeks to network other counseling organizations as well, is intimately associated with T4G and The Gospel Coalition. The who’s who of Gospel Sanctification sit on its governing board including David Powlison and Paul David Tripp.

Missionary Organization

It’s primary missionary organization was founded by the father of Gospel Sanctification / Sonship—Dr. John “Jack” Miller. Banner of Truth states the  following in The Movement Called Sonship: “Miller encouraged New Life Presbyterian Church into originating the ‘World Harvest Mission’, a non-denominational missionary organization. Sonship became its main teaching vehicle.”

Bible

The English Standard Version (ESV) was first published by Crossway in 2001. Its vice president of editorial is Justin Taylor who also authors The Gospel Coalition Blog, the multimedia propaganda machine for GS doctrine. One of the translators was Wayne Grudem, also well known as a major proponent of GS doctrine. The ESV’s GS connection has made it the most purchased English Bible in the past ten years. The latest promotion of the ESV by Crossway, “Trusted: Trusted Legacy [a whopping ten years]; trusted By Leaders; Trusted For Life,” features an endorsement by the who’s who of  GS doctrine.

The Complete Fix

With Michael Horton’s recent publication of “The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way” (2011), the total fix is in place. The GS machine will now begin to move forward—rewriting and re-forming orthodox Christianity. I confidently predict that Horton’s book will be widely used in seminaries nationwide. Seminary students will be pumped into the local churches with a skewered view of truth—but using all of the same terminology that was formally orthodox.

What Can Be Done?

This doctrine thrives on the fact that Christians are theologically dumbed-down. If most Christians do not know the difference between justification and sanctification (and they don’t), they are helpless against this false doctrine. If most Christians don’t realize the importance of understanding hermeneutics (and they don’t), they are even more helpless. Local churches need to start in-doctrineating their people.

paul

12 Responses

Subscribe to comments with RSS.

  1. Bill's avatar Bill said, on April 22, 2011 at 5:02 AM

    Thanks Paul.

    Your detective work of connecting the dots to this Beastly Monster appears accurate. Looks like a fire breathing dragon that means big damage in the future. The words “Save others from the fire,” and “expose what is evil” come to mind. The battle is heating up.

    Fortunately, though people don’t know Justification and Sanctification they can still read direct statements by Jesus that contradict GS/Sonship. Statements such as “Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and don’t do what I say.” Hearing and obeying are all through Christ’s teaching. The Truth of the Faith is also in the old hymn books. Under Sonship type worship I remember how often I thought that the hymns we sang were far more Orthodox than the Pastor’s sermon. For example: “Trust and Obey, cause there’s no other way. To be happy in Jesus, is to trust and obey.” Of course, they are probably burning the old hymn books to make room for Horton’s new Systematic Theology book! The Rick Warren style Contemporary music requires no books anyway. They think they are getting away with it. Ha! The One enthrowned in Heaven laughs (PS 2)!

    Arkansas Bill

    Like

    • pauldohse's avatar pauldohse said, on April 22, 2011 at 5:47 AM

      Bill, “7 / 11” music. 7 verses about the gospel repeated 11 times.

      > —–Original Message—– >

      Like

    • pauldohse's avatar pauldohse said, on April 22, 2011 at 5:50 AM

      I mean…7 words about the gospel repeated 11 times. 7 verses repeated 11 times refers to redemptive-historical preaching.

      > —–Original Message—– >

      Like

  2. Bill's avatar Bill said, on April 22, 2011 at 7:39 AM

    That’s funny! Years ago, I remember the Sonship students uttering monotonous repetitions of -“Just gi-me the Gospel.” Hey, somebody’s probably put it in song by now.
    Where is the depth of understanding? Where is Paul’s bulwark, “AND WE KNOW.” Faith is being sure, and we must be sure for the sake of the poor dieing world! Strange that the guys who claim “Know what you believe and why you believe it” are leading into shallow waters and ultimate shipwreck. They claim to be experts in Systematic Theology. However, to them people making every effort to live the holy life are in bondage. They think that without holiness they will see God. How ridiculous!

    “The One enthroned in heaven laughs (PS 2:4).”

    Arkansas Bill

    Like

    • pauldohse's avatar pauldohse said, on April 22, 2011 at 7:55 AM

      Now wait a minute here Bill:”I remember the Sonship students uttering monotonous repetitions of – ‘Just gi-me the Gospel.'” You’re just kidding, right?

      > —–Original Message—– >

      Like

  3. Bill's avatar Bill said, on April 22, 2011 at 9:09 AM

    No kidding. I was not attending classes at the time when I heard “Just gi-me the Gospel.” I quit after a couple worthless meetings, but others continued. I heard the repetition immediately before weekly prayer meetings began. This was around 2000 (Y2K) when writer Gary North (R. Rushdoony’s son-in-law) was in the church promoting Sonship. You may have heard, Gary also had a big Y2K doomsday (false alarm) website. He was wrong about Sonship too. The Teaching Elder was the real instigator. I think he got it from Josiah Bancroft of World Harvest Missions. It was only students that uttered “Just gi-me the Gospel. I had no idea what it was about but after reading your reports about “Gospel Driven” makes me think there’s a connection. I wonder if any other churches have this ritual?

    Arkansas Bill

    Like

    • pauldohse's avatar pauldohse said, on April 22, 2011 at 10:24 AM

      Unbelievable! I’m I here right now? Hey Bill–I do expect weekly baptism to become a part of some of these churches. I mean, why not? What better way to contemplate the gospel?

      > —–Original Message—– >

      Like

  4. Bill's avatar Bill said, on April 22, 2011 at 10:36 AM

    Ha!!!!

    Yeah, it’s a logical addition. Weekly baptisms, the same people every week, over and over. Talk about Dunkers.

    I might add that the “Just gi-me the Gospel” people were uttering to themselves, but within hearing level of others. Fortunatley, there were not many of these folks. It almost appeared to be a preparation of themselves for the prayer meeting. I don’t know if any of the Sonship teachers told them to do it.

    Arkansas Bill

    Like

  5. Bill's avatar Bill said, on April 22, 2011 at 12:21 PM

    Just one more note on the comment above. This repetition of “Just gi-me the Gospel” was heard on several occasions. It was strange, and I’ll never forget it. I suppose it’s real meaning will remain a mystery, because I never asked them about it. However, I think if you were there you would have agreed with me that these folks were not the smartest in the room. Ha!

    I have another story, I heard second hand, about the repetition of Sonship, Sonship, Sonship… but I’ll save that for another day.

    Arkansas Bill

    Like

  6. Mark@DR's avatar Mark@DR said, on April 22, 2011 at 1:52 PM

    Paul,

    Like you, I have lots to say about this post, but I’ll save it for another day. For the moment, suffice it to say that I can find no “smoking gun” corroboration between NCT and Westminster Theological Seminary. The only link I can find is that two of the dozen or so main NCT movers and shakers took graduate degrees from Westminster. This obviously isn’t sufficient grounds to say that Westminster birthed NCT.

    Instead, I find overwhelming evidence that NCT’s main educational institution was Providence Theological Seminary, and that NCT developed in Reformed Baptist circles.

    Click to access tmsj18f.pdf

    Regards,
    Mark

    Like

    • pauldohse's avatar pauldohse said, on April 23, 2011 at 12:32 AM

      Mark, Your input would be great. David Marshall (Trinity Reformed Baptist Church, Hamilton, New Zealand) wrote a review of Barcellose’s book in Banner of Truth and also “seems” to think it came out of Westminster. Granted, NCT could be like RHH, which was already about in some form, but was well suited to bolster Sonship Theology. However, the close kinship of NCT and Sonship/GS is irrefutable. Proponents of GS disagree on double imputation and NCT / CT, but there is plenty of wiggle room there–with the NCT/DI crowd being more susceptible to exposure for being the error that it is.

      Will look forward to hearing from you, paul

      > —–Original Message—– >

      Like

  7. Paul M. Dohse Sr.'s avatar paulspassingthoughts said, on October 24, 2013 at 7:31 AM

    Reblogged this on Clearcreek Chapel Watch.

    Like


Leave a comment