|
 
         
|
|
Creedal Failure
[Response To Gentry's Analysis of the Full Preterist
View...]
[GENTRY] First, hyper-preterism is heterodox. It is outside of the creedal
orthodoxy of Christianity. No creed allows any Second Advent in A.D. 70. No creed allows
any other type of resurrection than a bodily one. Historic creeds speak of the universal,
personal judgment of all men, not of a representative judgment in A.D. 70.
First Since when did the label heterodox (different doctrine)
get re-defined in terms of conformity with the creeds? The Reformers were very
careful to define orthodoxy, heterodoxy, and heresy in
terms of conformity or non-conformity with Scripture. Who says anyones orthodoxy
must be judged by conformity with uninspired documents that came into existence many years
and even centuries after inspiration ceased? Gentry has put himself in close proximity to
the Romanist position (the pope above or on a par with Scripture) by allowing the creeds
to be the standard by which we judge orthodoxy (straight doctrine). That is
putting uninspired human interpretations into a position above or on a par with Scripture.
It is the same thing as Romanism, except the Romanists put a man (the pope) in that
position instead of the creeds. The Reformers would not have tolerated such a compromise
of the sola Scriptura and tota scriptura principles. Gentrys appeal
here is to the creeds. True Reformers should cry foul at this point. Something
can be in-line with human creeds and still not be ortho with Scripture (and
vice versa). Now, Im not suggesting the creeds and historic traditions of the church
dont have a valid utility in helping us understand the truth of Scripture. But their
interpretations should never be set up as an ultimate standard of authority for judging
what is orthodox with Scripture. Only Scripture has that kind of absolute authority. Our
doctrines (doxy) must be straight (ortho) in line with Scripture,
but not necessarily with the interpretations in the creeds. So, Gentry is out of bounds
using the creeds as the basis for his decision about whether something is orthodox.
Scripture alone is to be used for that purpose.
I am surprised at Gentrys hesitancy to believe the historic church could have
missed a few things. The Reformers (and theonomists) had no difficulty rationalizing their
formulation (or re-formulation) of new doctrines and creedal statements which the early
church would not necessarily have understood, believed or agreed with. David Green shared
this material from Gary Norths book, Dominion and Common Grace, to illustrate
what Im saying here:
On the linear, progressive character of church history, Gary North had this to say in
his book, Dominion and Common Grace:
There has also been progress. We see this especially in the progress of the Christian
creeds. Look at the Apostles Creed. Then look at the Westminster Confession of
Faith. Only a fool or a heretic would deny theological progress. ...The creeds have
been steadily improved. [Gary North, Dominion and Common Grace, Chapter 4, Van
Til's Version of Common Grace, Differentiation and Progress, pg. 101.]
Van Til ...was unwilling to challenge the older Reformed creeds on this point (natural
law as a common ground link between covenant-keepers and covenant-breakers),
...His ideas have made creedal revision mandatory, but he was unwilling to call publicly
for a revision of the creeds leading to more biblically precise definitions of such
seventeenth-century concepts as general equity moral law, and
the covenant of works. (Gary North, Dominion and Common Grace, Chapter
5, Eschatology and Biblical Law, Postmillennialism and Common Grace, Van Til's Dilemma,
pg. 115)
The churchs creeds improve over time. This, in turn, gives Christians cultural
power. Is it any wonder that the Westminster Confession of Faith was drawn up at
the high point of the Puritans control of England. ...It was the Reformation that
made possible modern science and technology. (Gary North, Dominion and Common Grace,
Chapter 7, Epistemological Self-Consciousness and Cooperation, pg. 182)
To sum up: North says that if there is really ethical/epistemological/cultural progress
in history because of Christ's favor and gifts in behalf of His Church, then there must necessarily
be improvements and revisions in the creeds, even in the
ecumenical creeds! To deny this one must be a fool or a heretic.
Of course, North is not advocating changing any of the Biblical content of the creeds
or confessions, but rather merely the interpretations and applications that have been
added to the Biblical material, the same way full preterists are. Are the Reformers and
reconstructionists the only ones who have the right to formulate new creeds, catechisms
and confessional statements? And if the earlier creeds, confessions and catechisms were
such infallible bastions of orthodoxy, why did the Reformers in various European countries
compose new ones or make changes to them? Why did American churches go further to revise
them again? Reconstructionists have added more on top of that. Full preterists are
Reformers, and as such it should be obvious that we believe the early church and the
creeds can be (and have been found to be) mistaken. Isnt that what the word
reform implies? Even Gentrys own little tract entitled, The
Usefulness of Creeds, notes that the creeds contain more than just biblical content.
He admits they contain interpretations and applications of Scripture. I am
certainly not suggesting that the Biblical content of the creeds is mistaken. That
would be charging Scripture with error. But, I am saying that our interpretations
and applications of Scripture can be and often are mistaken. And when centuries of
further Bible study reveals that there are some problems in our interpretations and
applications of Scripture, we owe it to ourselves and posterity to correct those
errors and reform our creeds to reflect this better way of interpreting and applying the
Bible, and to do so as quickly as possible, lest an erroneous creed be appealed to as an
ancient boundary which must not be moved.
The idea that the harlot of Revelation is the Roman Catholic Church and that the Beast
is the Pope, has been a very dear belief (credo) of many Reformers for the last four
hundred years, and was even included in both the Belgic (Art. 36) and the Westminster (Ch.
25, Par. 6) confessions, the latter of which Gentrys denomination supposedly holds
to rigidly. People died for that interpretation. Gentry is obviously not in strict
subscription to the WCF, since his commentary on Revelation teaches the Beast was
Nero. Why didnt Gentry stick with it? Who gave him the freedom to reform it? This is
an eschatological interpretation and application of Scripture. Is he the only
one who has the right to interpret and apply Scripture in a different way than past
generations? He has come up with a different interpretation of the time and nature of
fulfillment of these endtime events. If he has the right to correct errors in previous
generations eschatological concepts, why dont we? He has not questioned the
biblical content of the creeds (the actual events themselves), and neither have we. He
still believes Scripture predicted the return of Christ and the other eschatological
events, but he reinterprets the time and nature of the fulfillment of those events. He has
added his own interpretation and application of the time and nature of
fulfillment. If he has the right to do that, so does everyone else.
To be outside creedal orthodoxy is not the same as being outside biblical
orthodoxy. One can be biblically orthodox without being creedally orthodox if
the creeds have any biblically un-orthodox interpretations and applications in
them. That is exactly the case here. Gentry and I both subscribe to the same list of
biblical events and doctrines in the creeds. The difference is the time and nature of
fulfillment interpretations that have been applied to those doctrines. Gentry
seems to think full preterists are tampering with the biblical material in the creeds,
when in fact we are only correcting the erroneous interpretations that have crept into
them. There is a big difference.
Gentry says, No creed allows.... This is an important issue, but the
crucial question must always be whether Scripture allows for different interpretations and
applications of the eschatological texts. On the basis of Gentrys assertions here,
it could be argued that the creeds dont allow any kind of coming of Jesus at AD 70.
This presents a problem for Gentry, since he does believe there was some kind of coming of
Christ at AD 70. Do the creeds allow him that freedom? One of the fundamental
presuppositions of the Reformation was that very allowance of different interpretations
and applications of the biblical content in the creeds. What Gentry has done here is to
say that there is no other possible way to interpret the time and nature of fulfillment of
the biblical eschatological events than a physical, visible, personal,
bodily one (and still be orthodox with Scripture). This sounds like the
premillennial dispensationalists who are so certain that the kingdom of Heaven is not here
yet, simply because they havent seen it with their eyes. Gentry differs with their
view in regard to the time and nature of fulfillment, yet believes in the same list of
eschatological events as they do. Are he and they the only ones who have the freedom to
interpret and apply Scripture differently? Full preterists are not inventing a new list of
eschatological events to substitute for the list in the creeds. We have the same list of
biblical events (the same biblical content in the creeds). We just differ on the time and
nature of their fulfillment, just as the premillennial dispensationalists do. If there is
no freedom for the full preterist interpretations and applications, there is
no freedom for Gentrys or anyone elses, no matter how slightly or radically
different they are from the creeds.
It is one thing to say that the creedal writers did not come up with the same
interpretation of those events as we have, but quite another to say that their
interpretation is the only correct one. Again, we are not questioning the biblical content
of the creeds, but merely the time and nature interpretations and applications
of that content. Gentry seems to ascribe virtual infallibility (inspiration) to the
creeds. This should make any true Reformer shudder. The Westminster Confession did not go
that far. It recognized that it could have missed some things and allowed for revision and
correction. Just compare the breadth and depth of scholarship sitting on the Westminster
Assembly to the men involved in the various ecumenical councils. If a document so late as
the WCF has errors in it, why cant we believe earlier documents which do not stand
on as much interpretative efforts or depth of scholarship can also be mistaken in some of
their interpretations and applications?
Ken Davies reminded me that the subject of eschatology was never debated by any
of the ecumenical councils. As Jim Jordan has well said (Biblical Chronology,
Problems With New Testament History, Vol. 5, No. 1, Jan. 1993, p. 1):
Finally, though the Church Fathers are fathers in a sense, and are of real
value to us, they are also the Church Babies in another sense.
All this should be born in mind when it comes to their haphazard testimony... [emphasis
added]
How much confidence and authority can we place upon the church fathers and
their creeds in those doctrinal areas (like eschatology) that they really spent little
time with? What is the danger of putting the creeds into an authoritative position?
Isnt it doing the same thing as the Pharisees were doing (invalidating the
Word of God for the sake of their traditions)? David Chilton read J. S.
Russells book (The Parousia) while he was at Tyler back in the mid-80s,
but he told me that his allegiance to the creeds at that time prevented him from accepting
Russells full preterist position. But in the last two years of his life he began to
see that the creeds could be mistaken, and that Scripture alone is qualified to be our
authority and guide in matters of true Biblical orthodoxy. He closely examined Eastern
Orthodoxy, but backed away when he began to see where it leads (away from the absolute
authority of Scripture and away from the need to reform). Creedalism moves one toward
either Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy, and several within the Reformed camp have
already gone down that path (e.g. Franky Schaeffer, Jerry Mattiticks, Scott Hahn,
and others). This is exactly the danger of Gentrys position. If his creedal stance
is followed consistently to its logical end, it would force him out of Reformed theology
into either Romanism or Orthodoxy. Several others (e.g. Andrew Sandlin, Jim West,
John Campbell, et al) have similarly expressed their allegiance to the creeds. They
shouldnt be surprised later when some of their disciples apply their creedal ideas
consistently and leave the Reformed (and always reforming) faith.
The real question that must be addressed is whether the Bible (not the creeds) allows
any second advent in AD 70, and any other type of resurrection than a
bodily one. Just because the creeds may not allow it, does not mean the Bible does
not allow it. Disagreement with the creeds only points to a possible problem. The
determination of whether it is a fatal problem must be made on the basis of Scripture
alone (sola Scriptura and tota scriptura). It seems that Gentry does not
even want to consider that possibility. He is content with the creedal interpretations. He
seems to assume that no other interpretation of the nature of fulfillment is Biblically
possible or defensible. This response certainly aims to challenge his assumptions and
presuppositions in that regard.
[GENTRY] It would be most remarkable if the entire church that came through A.D.
70 missed the proper understanding of the eschaton and did not realize its members had
been resurrected! And that the next generations had no inkling of the great transformation
that took place! Has the entire Christian church missed the basic contours of Christian
eschatology for its first 1900 years?
It is evident that most within early Christianity missed the full significance of AD
70. The question is, why? The early church was so intimately involved in the events, they
couldnt see the big picture like an outsider or historian can. Like a person down in
the middle of a forest, they cant see the whole forest because the trees right
around them block their field of vision. The early church failed to recognize just how
pivotal the events of the first generation of Christianity were. They just didnt
sense the bigger picture. We are in a similar situation today. Historians will love to
write profound things about how pivotal the Twentieth Century has been. In one century we
have gone from horse and buggy to space shuttles, lunar landings and planetary probes; and
from signal fires, smoke signals, and pony express to telephone, satellite communications,
computers and email. The magnitude and pace of change in this century is nothing short of
staggering. But we who have lived through it quite often fail to realize just how truly
revolutionary it really has been. The same thing happened in the first century. They just
didnt grasp the significance and implications of the destruction of Jerusalem in AD
70.
It is indeed most remarkable that mainline Christianity has overlooked the
full implications of AD 70, but that doesnt mean the eschatological fulfillment
didnt occur just because the Jews or the Christians didnt recognize it. Many
of the fulfillments Gentry claims in his commentary on Revelation cannot be documented
using Scripture. He has to rely on eye-witnesses and contemporary historians to support
his first century interpretation. He has come up with some applications of the book of
Revelation that I have not seen in any other Christian writings heretofore. Should we
throw those out merely because they are innovations? Or do we check them against Scripture
and history to see if they make reasonable sense? The principles Gentry is using here
against the full preterist view could be applied to his own untraditional
opinions about the date of Revelation and its first century fulfillment. In fact, some of
the Reformed theologians present at the 1993 Covenant Eschatology Symposium suggested that
very thing. Some of them questioned Gentrys interpretations and applications quite
closely. Gentry is trying to paint himself as being radically different from full
preterists, yet totally in harmony with creedal and confessional interpretations. He is
not as far from the full preterist view as he tries to make others believe, and he has his
own set of differences to justify, and must do so using the same kind of approach full
preterists are using.
If we granted Gentrys presuppositions about the nature of the second
advent, bodily resurrection, and personal judgment, we might
arrive at the same conclusions he has. However, what if his presuppositions about the time
and nature of fulfillment are not orthodox with Scripture? What if it can be shown that
the historic church failed to comprehend the correct time and nature of fulfillment of
biblical eschatology? This may be surprising, and probably unsettling for many of us, but
it is much less disastrous to our faith than the alternatives suggested by Albert
Schweitzer, Rudolph Bultmann and Bertrand Russell. We have to do something with the
imminency of the NT. If we dont take a full preterist approach, we leave the
integrity of Jesus and the NT writers utterly defenseless. Certainly, it impugns the
interpretative accuracy of the historic church in matters of eschatology, but as R. C.
Sproul observed, ...people have attacked the credibility of Jesus. Maybe some Church
Fathers made a mistake. Maybe our favorite theologians have made mistakes. I can abide
with that. I cant abide with Jesus being a false prophet. [We need to
state it clearly for the record that R. C. Sproul, Sr. is not a full preterist, but he
does see a lot of merit in the partial preterist approach similar to Ken Gentry.] When the
mid-second century church confronted the seeming non-fulfillment of the supposedly
imminent eschatological events, they decided to re-interpret the time statements instead
of re-examine their presuppositions about the nature of fulfillment. Justin Martyr,
Shepherd of Hermas and Clement of Rome all postulated the idea of an indefinite
postponement. They tampered with the time of fulfillment, rather than change their
presuppositions about the nature of fulfillment. To this date, the historic church has
never fully recovered from that early and fundamental error. They could just as
easily have questioned their presuppositions about the nature of fulfillment, and if they
had, we might not be having this debate today.
So, in response to Gentrys question about whether most of the historic
Christian church missed the basic contours of Christian eschatology for its first
1900 years, I would have to answer this way: The historic church understood that its
soteriology was fully consummated by the advent of Christ and His establishment of the
Church. What it did not realize is that eschatology was nothing more than the final
consummating events of its soteriology. They disconnected eschatology from soteriology
(because of their presuppositions about the physical nature of fulfillment), and thus
failed to see the eschatological fulfillments. They saw the spiritual fulfillment of
soteriology, but continued looking for a physical, visible and materialistic fulfillment
of eschatology the same way the Jews missed the soteriological fulfillments. The
early church knew that the true Israel was no longer defined racially and
nationalistically, and was now universal in scope, but many of them (esp. the Ebionites,
Montanists, and other chiliasts) kept on thinking this new universal Israel
had a materialistic paradise in its imminent future. They never seemed willing to question
their presuppositions about the nature of fulfillment of eschatology. The early church
fathers who were apologists against the Jews are the best source for illustrations of this
problem. (See especially Athanasius On The Incarnation and his Festal
Letters). Athanasius posited complete fulfillment of all soteriological events in
conjunction with the (singular) advent/parousia of Christ and the establishment of the
church in the generation leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem. He spoke of the
victory over death (which is an eschatological event) in soteriological terms, failing to
see the inconsistency of disconnecting it from its eschatological implications. How can
the final soteriological enemy (Death) be conquered if the other final events of
eschatology (i.e. the parousia, resurrection, judgment, etc.) have not also been
consummated? This is the very inconsistency these beloved brethren never quite grasped.
Even today, Bible interpreters have difficulty seeing this inconsistency. The confusion is
even more apparent when one studies the various positions different branches of the church
have taken in regard to where people go at death and what their state is there until the
resurrection and judgment. Yet through all this, the historic church has allowed diversity
of opinion on the interpretations and applications of the time and nature of
fulfillment of the Biblical eschatological events. So, why is Gentry now trying to
anathematize us for exercising that freedom?
For more information about the eschatological beliefs of the early church and how full
preterists handle creedal issues, the reader is encouraged to obtain and read the articles
by Edward E. Stevens entitled, The Early Church and The Creeds and What
If The Creeds Are Wrong? They are available as a set from Kingdom Publications for a
donation of $5 including postage. These articles deal with the rest of Gentrys
objections based on the creeds and the historic church, and show when the mistakes were
made, who made them and why. It should not surprise us that the early church missed some
things. I am at a loss to explain how Montanism, chiliasm, sacerdotalism, the doctrine of
purgatory, indulgences, Maryolatry, baptismal regeneration, Arianism, Pelagianism, and a
host of other departures from biblical orthodoxy could ever develop in the church. How do
we explain the Ebionites failing to recognize the change of law that occurred,
or the rejection of the deity of Christ by some of the Nazarene (Jewish) sects and the
Arians? How could the Montanists have so much success in their teaching that Montanus was
the inspired mouthpiece of the Paraclete and that the charismata were still around? There
didnt seem to be very many who recognized any kind of coming in judgment
at AD 70 (like Gentry and many other amils and postmils do). How does any error get into
the church and stay around for so long? How could the church miss it on so many things?
Why havent the Roman and Greek churches abandoned all their errors in view of the
great reforms clearly delineated by the Protestant Reformers? In view of this, it seems
obvious that the vast majority of Christians overlooked the fulfillment of eschatology at
AD 70. The church has always had difficulty defining and maintaining orthodoxy. But, there
are bright spots in the patristic writings which do show that some Christians in the early
centuries understood eschatology as having been accomplished in at least a soteriological
sense. But even if none of them had, it would not disqualify a better understanding of
biblical truth if one comes along. Our faith rests on inspired biblical truth, not on
uninspired interpretations and applications in the creeds.
Articles
IPA Home
|
|