Where Is The Church Heading?

Introduction

None of us knows the specifics of the future. There are a few things that every Christian knows from Scripture about the future. We know that Christ shall return (Acts 1:11), that there shall be a bodily resurrection (1 Thess 4:16), and after that, the judgment (Rom 14:10). The future, of course, is in the good, sovereign, and merciful hands of our triune God (Heidelberg Catechism 27). Believers know that whether we live or die, we are the Lord’s (Rom 14:8; Heidelberg Catechism 1). There are other things about which believers have certainty, but much of the future, from a human perspective, is a matter of probabilities. These we can determine from history.

Gnostics Never Die

Perhaps the greatest threat to the early post-apostolic church was that of Gnosticism, a second-century (100s AD) movement that drew on threads in pre-Christian pagan philosophy to create a heresy of the Christian faith. The Gnostics denied the goodness of creation per se, the validity and truth of the Hebrew Scriptures, and the true humanity of Christ (among other things). The Gnostics specialized in filling in the blanks. Where the gospels maintained a reverent silence about the infancy of our Lord Jesus, the Gnostics filled in the story with myths. Where the gospels were silent about our Lord’s life between his appearance in the temple and his baptism, the Gnostics filled in the story. They peddled myths about the hierarchies of being and sought to turn the biblical picture of the world on its head. They offered salvation through secret knowledge (gnosis). One movement led by a pastor’s son, Marcion, which broke away from the Gnostics, flourished for about 300 years. The early Christian apologists, e.g., Irenaeus and Tertullian, spent much time and ink defending orthodox Christianity against the Gnostics and the Marcionites.

If some of this sounds familiar, it should. Versions of this competing religion have become widely popular both among the new pagans but also in some ostensibly Christian circles. Otherwise Bible-believing evangelicals regularly speak about the Old Testament (the Hebrew and Aramaic Scriptures considered as a whole) in ways that are not far distant from the ways that Marcion spoke about them. Christians regularly appeal to secret or esoteric knowledge in ways that are quite reminiscent of the Gnostics.

Every indication is that we will continue to see claims from the culture, fed by neo-pagan antipathy to orthodox Christianity, such as those made by Dan Brown and even by some scholars who should know better about competing “gospels” (e.g., the so-called “Gospel of Jude”) or competing “epistles,” which give the impression that the formation of the New Testament was arbitrary and political when the evidence points us in exactly the opposite direction.

Richard Baxter Returns

From the beginning of the church, there have been those within its pale who have been a little uneasy with the gospel of free salvation by grace alone, through faith alone. Even though the early church was relatively clear about this, when our better writers addressed it (e.g., the Letter to Diognetus, c. 150 AD, or Augustine’s anti-Pelagian writings in the early 5th century), there were always those who wanted to make salvation conditional upon our performance. That story, “in by grace, finish by cooperation with grace,” became widespread in the medieval period. Of course, it was overthrown in the Reformation but almost as soon as the gospel was recovered, some started chipping away at it even within Protestantism. Some undermined it by denying that believers must give evidence of new life and true faith by seeking to bring their lives into conformity with God’s holy law. The 1520s were marked by an “antinomian” crisis. Indeed, it was Martin Luther himself who coined that word to describe those who denied the abiding validity of God’s law. In the following decades others chipped away at the gospel from the other direction by implying that salvation begins by grace alone (sola gratia), through faith alone (sola fide) but is ultimately contingent upon our good works. In the 17th century, the Remonstrants (Jacob Arminius, et al) added conditions to election and to salvation. Richard Baxter (1615–91), whom J. I. Packer rightly calls a “neonomian” (a new legalist) openly taught that faith justifies, not because it rests in Christ’s finished work, but because it obeys God’s law. John Owen devoted an entire volume (5) of his Works to refuting his errors on justification. Today, however, Baxter is presented to us as an orthodox Reformed pastor, and readers and students are shocked to find that he openly denied the gospel.

Indeed, in some quarters today, even as we just celebrated the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, there were leading evangelical and even Reformed and Presbyterian Christians advocating a doctrine of two-stage salvation or justification. An initial justification by grace alone, through faith alone, and then a so-called “final salvation” or “final justification” through faith and works. History tells us that we must re-learn and defend the gospel in every generation. My experience tells me that it has to be done at least every ten years. Luther said that he preached the gospel every week because people forget it from one Lord’s Day to the next.

The Wounded Beast Shall Rise

From time to time, Protestants have been tempted to think that the Roman communion has been dealt a fatal blow. History, however, tells us that though she has been wounded from time to time, she always returns. However vigorous the Reformed churches may be in some parts of the world (e.g., Brazil, South Korea, and Nigeria) the confessional Presbyterian and Reformed churches in North America (NAPARC) are tiny compared to the Roman communion.

At the moment, the Roman churches seem to be flourishing and there is little reason to think that will change. Buoyed by the vigorous pontificate of John Paul II, Roman institutions seem positively robust. Evangelicals, ignorant of the Reformation and the Reformed confessional tradition, tired of shallow worship and moral flabbiness will continue to find Rome a congenial place in which to find a connection to a tradition beyond Pentecostalism or the Second Great Awakening.

Islam Again

There are other ancient and persistent challenges to orthodox, biblical, Reformed Christianity that we might mention, e.g., Islam. No other global religious movement presents a greater threat to social stability and the mission of the church across the globe than Islam. After a period of repression under colonialism, Islam is back with a vengeance both theologically and militarily. Few Christians today are equipped to meet the intellectual and theological challenges presented by Islam.

Conclusion

In most parts of the world, Biblical, orthodox Christianity is returning to the position it held before the rise of the European church-state complex we call Christendom. We are living in the wake of its collapse. This is a frightening reality for some but our hope is where it has always been, at the right hand of the Father. Christ is ruling the nations now and no movement, not Gnosticism, Moralism, Romanism, or Islamism can alter our Lord’s plans for his church and for the nations. After all, the Apostle Paul promised the church in Rome, “the God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet” (Rom 16:20). On that basis he pronounced peace upon a church that was about to endure a grave trial in which Christians would be put to a violent and sometimes fiery death merely for bearing the name of Christ and for refusing to renounce him. Yet, even in that, Christ’s sovereign will was being accomplished and the Spirit was drawing his elect to new life, true faith, and to union with the risen Christ. So it shall be. No one shall snatch them out of his hand (John 10:28).

©2017 Westminster Seminary California. Published by permission.


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8 comments

  1. Good piece. I appreciated your reference to Islamism, I think this is very underestimated, not only in political circles, but in the church. But, as you referenced, no one can snatch Gods people out of His hand.

  2. “…Evangelicals, ignorant of the Reformation and the Reformed confessional tradition…”
    Yes, I have found this to be true. There is scarcely any reference to the Reformation in evangelical circles, even on “Reformation Sunday.” But why is this and how did it come about?

    “…Today, however, Baxter is presented to us as an orthodox Reformed pastor…” I have found this to be true also among evangelicals. But why is this the case and how did it come about?

  3. We need to remember the Lord promised. “ I will build My Church and the gates of hell will not prevail over her.”
    I heard talk from, Leonardo De Chirco on the state of Roman Catholicism today. I believe it’s at a Ligonier conference. He points out how they are trying to draw as many in as they can and changing up their practices and some ecclesiology to do that . They want to embrace everyone to be good tossing out the gospel. We’re right back where we were prior to the reformation it seems.
    I know an Anglo Catholic who is pretty hyped up on ecumenism. He thinks that’s the answer, let’s all just get along and change the world. Eeeegads.
    I think persecution will come more from the Churches separated from the gospel, even Protestant and Reformed.

    • You make such an excellent point! Pragmatism puts “results” at the forefront. As long as they hear “something about Jesus” the gospel is getting out there. The trouble is, that a wrong message about salvation in Christ is s false gospel that will damn souls to hell just as well as total ignorance. Jesus is either the perfect, allien Saviour, or no saviour, So many people think they know the gospel but don’t understand that it means to be trusting ONLY in what Christ has done. To question such a false gospel is considered harsh and even unchristian.
      Heidelberg Q and A 30

  4. Dr. Clark,
    Thank you for republishing this question. ‘Where Is The Church Headed?’ from 2017.

    It is good TO KNOW that men who oppose God’s Decrees and Predestination – (BC 16; HC 54; SHC X; COD Head 1 Articles 6 & 7; WCF III; WSC Q and A 7 & 8; WLC Q and A 12, 13, 14) – and Christ’s Identity – (HC Q & A 30 Names of Christ) also oppose His ‘justified sinners’, ‘sanctified saints’, and His people who are at Peace with Him. (Rom 5-8)

    I see the opposition to His Church (those whom God chose in Christ before the foundation of the world to believe and trust in Him, His Son, and His Spirit and are in the substance of Christ) will always be persecuted by those who do no believe but may participate in the administration of Christ.

    Hasn’t persecution of His Church already begun by unbelievers in ‘the church’?

  5. Interesting observations. I’d like to hear more about this two-stage phenomenon…
    “ but is ultimately contingent upon our good works. In the 17th century, the Remonstrants (Jacob Arminius, et al) added conditions to election and to salvation. Richard Baxter (1615–91), whom J. I. Packer rightly calls a “neonomian” (a new legalist) openly taught that faith justifies, not because it rests in Christ’s finished work, but because it obeys God’s law. John Owen devoted an entire volume (5) of his Works to refuting his errors on justification. Today, however, Baxter is presented to us as an orthodox Reformed pastor, and readers and students are shocked to find that he openly denied the gospel.
    Indeed, in some quarters today, even as we just celebrated the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, there were leading evangelical and even Reformed and Presbyterian Christians advocating a doctrine of two-stage salvation or justification. An initial justification by grace alone, through faith alone, and then a so-called “final salvation” or “final justification” through faith and works. ”

    The RCC is a perpetually good candidate for a global-institutional-culturally-authoritative, state-sanctioned church as a mere acceptable option for the religiously inclined. (The mystique and tradition is seductive even to some in our circles)…

    “ Roman institutions seem positively robust. Evangelicals, ignorant of the Reformation and the Reformed confessional tradition, tired of shallow worship and moral flabbiness will continue to find Rome a congenial place in which to find a connection to a tradition beyond Pentecostalism or the Second Great Awakening. Roman institutions seem positively robust. Evangelicals, ignorant of the Reformation and the Reformed confessional tradition, tired of shallow worship and moral flabbiness will continue to find Rome a congenial place in which to find a connection to a tradition beyond Pentecostalism or the Second Great Awakening.”

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