A Meeting Place for Evangelicals, Reformed, and Orthodox Christians

Author: Robert Arakaki (Page 75 of 89)

Response to Theodore – Semi-Pelagianism, Sola Fide, and Theosis

Luther Nailing the 95 Theses

On 22 December 2011, Theodore wrote:

#1 — Granting that the Eastern Orthodox Church (“EOC”) has an ancient tradition, and, further, that its pretty rituals contain much sacred meaning, the fact remains that it is — by its own admission — semi-Pelagian, and, as such, teaches a false religion.  Debates about the nature, duration, and content of the service are totally irrelevant when what is presented to the congregation is antithetical to Scripture.  

#2 — There are almost too many verses to count in support of Sola Fide, but a good place to start is Luke 18:26-27: “Those who heard it said, ‘Then who can be saved?’  He replied, ‘What is impossible for mortals is possible for God.'”  What part of “impossible” is so hard to grasp?  There’s no room for synergism here, and, by holding that ANY part of our salvation is the result of our own efforts fundamentally distorts the Gospel, invites the compounding of error, and injects lethal doses of doubt into what should be — in the elect — unshakable, persevering faith. 

#3 — In this regard, Mr. Arakaki states: “Salvation in the early Church was both sacramental and evangelical; faith in Christ was necessary in order for God’s grace to be received through the sacraments.” Here please note: 1. Faith comes first, before grace, and, 2. Sacraments — being performed by human beings — are unquestionably “works.” 

#4 — Thus, the Eastern Orthodox doctrine of theosis is a sad and ancient error invented by men to satisfy their fallen pride, mistaking the post-justification process of the working out of our sanctification through good works  for grace plus works leading to faith and justification, getting it precisely backwards:

#5 — “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God — not the result of works, so that no one may boast.  For we are what he has made us, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life.” Ephesians 2:8-10.  Contrary to the EOC (as stated by Mr. Arakaki, above), here please note: Grace comes first, then faith, followed by GOOD works AFTER we are created in Jesus Christ.

#6 — Whatever else the EOC may get right, such a profound doctrinal error cannot be embraced by a truly Christian church.  “But even if we or an angel from heaven should proclaim to you a gospel contrary to what we proclaimed to you, let that one be accursed!” Galatians 1:8.

#6 — Those of you roaming about from denomination to denomination searching for something to make you feel better about yourselves need to grapple with the fact that all the golden robes, gaudy temples, jewel-encrusted icons, clouds of incense and humanly invented theater in the universe are not going to get you any nearer (let alone into!) heaven…

#7 — “Whoever is from God hears the words of God.  The reason you do not hear them is that you are not from God.” John 8:47.

 

My Response

1. Semi-Pelagianism, Theological Benchmarks; Historical Context of Sola Fide

In paragraph #1 Theodore wrote: …the fact remains that it is — by its own admission — semi-Pelagian, and, as such, teaches a false religion.

Historically, the benchmark for theological orthodoxy has been Christology as defined by the Ecumenical Councils.  In the early church there were a variety of approaches with respect to soteriology.  Prominent in the early church was the understanding of Christ as victorious conqueror over the Devil and Death.  There was no one single theory of salvation that became the universal norm required of all Christians.  The controversy between Augustine and Pelagius resulted in the condemnation of Pelagianism.  At no time did the early church condemn the semi-Pelagian position.

What Theodore has done is to make the Protestant model of soteriology the benchmark for theological orthodoxy.  In his broad sweeping condemnation of Semi-Pelaganism Theodore has in effect condemned many of the early church fathers, e.g., Irenaeus of Lyons, Justin Martyr, Athanasius the Great, and many of the Greek Fathers.  He has in effect cut himself off from fellowship with the early church.

It is important to note that the term “semi-Pelagian” was not used in the early church.  According to the Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Walter Elwell, ed.) the term was first used in the Lutheran Formula of Concord (1527) and apparently only once.

Theodore’s criticism of the Orthodox Church becomes more problematic when we look closely at the Formula of Concord’s rejection of Semi-Pelagianism.  In Article II “Free Will” Negative Thesis 3, we read:

3. We reject also the error of the Semi-Pelagians, who teach that man by his own powers can make a beginning of his conversion, but without the grace of the Holy Ghost cannot complete it (emphasis added).

What we have here is a soteriological paradigm that involves certain assumptions about the Fall, Original Sin, human nature after the Fall, and how we are saved by Christ that are alien to Orthodoxy.  For example, Orthodoxy does not teach that man by his “own powers” can “make a beginning” of his conversion.  I challenge Theodore to present a church father, a council, or a liturgical text that teaches the Semi-Pelagian position as defined by the Formula of Concord.

The fundamental assumption here that drives the Protestant paradigm is the extreme Augustinian view of the Fall, i.e., that as a result of the Fall man’s capacity to respond to God’s grace was destroyed (see Formula of Concord Article I “Original Sin”, Negative Thesis 6; see also the Second Helvetic Confession chapters VIII and IX).  This is the Augustinian interpretation of the Fall.  It is the opinion of one church father but it was not part of the universal patristic consensus.

Western Christianity, especially Roman Catholicism after 1054 and later Protestantism, have been heavily influenced by Augustine.  When Luther formulated the doctrine of justification by faith alone he introduced a new twist to the Augustinian paradigm.  He then went on to make sola fide the core of his theological system and the benchmark for theological orthodoxy.  For Luther sola fide was the doctrine on which the church stands or falls (articulus stantis et cadentis ecclesiae).  What he did was to turn sola fide not just into a doctrine but a core dogma without which one could not be considered a Christian.  Orthodoxy abhors theological innovation and Luther did two things at the same time; he committed heresy by introducing a theological innovation and he committed schism by rejecting those who did not hold to sola fide, e.g., the early church fathers and the Orthodox Church.

Protestants believe that Luther discovered sola fide and in doing so recovered the Gospel, but to the Orthodox Luther invented a doctrine that none of the early church fathers taught.  Orthodoxy accepts that we are saved by divine grace and that we are justified by faith in Christ, but it never heard of our being justified by faith alone.   The difference is not just in sola fide but in the set of assumptions behind it.  Luther came up with sola fide in response to the problems he encountered in attempting to find salvation through medieval Catholicism.  This intellectual breakthrough came to be known as Luther’s Tower Experience.  Especially problematic for Luther was the Roman Catholic interpretation of Semi-Pelagianism, i.e., facere quod in se est (to do what is in you) (see Alister McGrath’s Iustitia Dei Vol. 2 p. 5).   Unlike medieval Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy was not confined to Augustinian theology nor was it influenced by Scholasticism’s drive for certainty, precision, and logical consistency.  In short, sola fide was one man’s response to a spiritual crisis rooted in the Roman Catholic understanding of salvation.  It soon became the basis for a new religious movement known as Protestantism.  The longstanding division between the churches of the East and the Church of Rome became further complicated by the emergence of Protestantism and its novel doctrines.

The issue here is not Pelagianism or Semi-Pelagianism.  The real issue between classical Protestantism and Orthodoxy is monergism versus synergism.  The Orthodox Church unabashedly affirms the synergistic understanding of salvation in Christ: God in his grace reaches out to us and we respond to God’s initiative.

Monergism (mono = one, erg = energy) is based upon a radical understanding of the Fall.  According to the monergistic position, because of the radical effect of the Fall, humanity lost any capacity to respond to God’s grace.  Augustine of Hippo taught that humans are born under a harsh necessity of committing sin.  John Calvin taught that fallen humanity became utterly depraved.   This radical understanding of the Fall leads to the position that there is only one key actor in our salvation: God.  God alone determines who will or will not be saved.  A logical consequence of monergism is the doctrine of double predestination.

Synergism (syn = together, erg = energy) is based upon a less radical understanding of the Fall.  According to the synergistic position, Adam and Eve’s sin resulted in our inheriting a corrupted nature.  Fallen humanity still possesses free will.  While we lack the ability to initiate salvation, we retain the ability to respond to God’s initiative.  There are ample citations from the church fathers that show they affirmed our free will in our response to God’s grace.  Gregory of Nyssa in The Great Catechism wrote: “For He who holds sovereignty over the universe permitted something to be subject to our own control, over which each of us alone is master.  Now this is the will: a thing that cannot be enslaved, being the power of self-determination.”  John Chrysostom wrote: “God never draws anyone to Himself by force and violence.  He wishes all to be saved, but forces no one.”

Just so there is no confusion: synergism is not the same as Semi-Pelagianism.  If Theodore has a bone to pick with Orthodoxy, it is over synergism.  There is no evidence of Orthodoxy affirming the Semi-Pelagian position, but there is evidence of it affirming the synergistic understanding of salvation.  Theodore will need to show how the Orthodox synergistic understanding of salvation deviates from the historic Christian faith and that its understanding of salvation has been formally condemned by a church council.

I’ve traced the historical context for sola fide in order to lay the ground work for my response to Theodore.  My criticisms of sola fide are several.  One, it is not part of the catholic (universal) faith of the early church.  It is based upon certain individuals, namely Augustine of Hippo and Martin Luther.  Two, Semi-Pelagianism was never condemned by the early church.  Three, the doctrinal standard for the early church was Christology, not soteriology.  Four, Luther had no authority to make sola fide into a dogma, only an ecumenical council has the final say on dogma.

Theodore, you cannot just use a label like “Semi-Pelagianism” to condemn Orthodoxy.  You need to use an appropriate benchmark for showing on what basis Orthodoxy is wrong.  I will readily agree with you that the Orthodox Church is not in agreement with Luther; that is because Orthodoxy is based on the theology of the early church.  We cannot accept a sixteenth century theological innovation.  You need to show that sola fide was taught in the early church and that it was used as a standard for theological orthodoxy.  Unless you can do so, I remain of the opinion that you are using as a theological benchmark a standard alien to the early church.  Either Luther’s sola fide is a theological novelty or it is part of the ancient Christian faith.  I have presented evidence for the former; I invite you to present evidence for the latter position.

One last note, by condemning Orthodoxy as a “false religion,” you are at the same time condemning the early church as a “false religion.”  Are you sure you want to take that extreme stance?

2. Biblical Teachings on Justification by Faith

In paragraph #2 Theodore cites Luke 18:26-27 to defend sola fide.  I’m surprised by his choice of passages.   In this encounter between Jesus and the rich young ruler neither the issue of justification nor faith are brought up.  One would need to do quite a bit of eisegesis (reading into the text) to arrive at the conclusion that the doctrine of sola fide is being taught here.  Furthermore, if one wishes to use this passage to rebut the doctrine of synergism then one must also take into account the following chapter in which the encounter between Zaccheus and Jesus results in Zaccheus giving up his wealth (Luke 19:8-10).

If Theodore wishes to present the biblical basis for the Protestant sola fide he would be better off discussing Paul’s letter to the Romans where faith and justification by faith are clearly discussed.  All he needs to do is point to at least one verse where the phrase “faith alone” is used explicitly, not inferred.  A doctrine can be inferred from Scripture but it is dangerous to base a fundamental dogma on an inferred understanding of Scripture.  Likewise, Theodore needs to take into account the one place where phrase “faith alone” (pistis monon) is used in Scripture, that is, James 2:24.  “You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only (pisteos monon) (NKJV).”

I was amused when in paragraph #3 Theodore infers that I was asserting that faith came first before grace.  This obsession with chronological order is characteristic of theological scholasticism in the West.  Theodore’s dismissive claim of baptism as “works” strikes me as a simplistic and extreme understanding of sola fide that is alien to Lutheran theology.  According to Luther’s Small Catechism Article IV baptism is not just a symbol but a sacrament that “effects forgiveness of sins, deliver from death and the devil, and grants eternal salvation to all who believes….”  This understanding of baptism is very much like that of the Orthodox Church.

In paragraph #5, Theodore writes: …here please note: Grace comes first, then faith, followed by GOOD works AFTER we are created in Jesus Christ.  The Orthodox position is not that one precedes the other but that faith and works go together, work together (synergy).  This synergistic interaction between faith and works is taught in James 2:22.  The Greek word synergei is used in this verse.  “Do you see that faith was working together (sunergei: syn = with, together; ergei = to work, to do) with his works, and by works faith was made perfect? (NKJV).”

3. Theosis – Becoming Like Christ

In paragraph #4 Theodore criticizes the doctrine of theosis.  He writes: Thus, the Eastern Orthodox doctrine of theosis is a sad and ancient error invented by men to satisfy their fallen pride, mistaking the post-justification process of the working out of our sanctification through good works  for grace plus works leading to faith and justification, getting it precisely backwards….  

First, he must address the fact that theosis has a biblical basis.  It is taught in II Peter 1:3-4 which talks about our becoming “partakers of the divine nature.”  This is not an isolated passage but one that complements other similar teachings about our ultimate glorified state.  In Romans 8:29 Paul writes about our being conformed to image of Christ.  In I John 3:2 John writes that at the Second Coming of Christ, “we shall be like Him.”

Second, the doctrine of theosis was taught by early church fathers like Athanasius the Great.  In the theological classic On The Incarnation, Athanasius wrote: “He, indeed, assumed humanity that we might become God (§54).”

Third, the doctrine of theosis has been given a more friendly reception by Reformed scholars recently.  I refer you to W. Bradford Littlejohn’s Mercersburg Theology and the Quest for Reformed Catholicity.  You can read my review of his book here.  I would caution Theodore against uncritically repeating the party line.  Reformed theology is complex and nuanced than many have thought it to be.  The same can be said for Orthodox theology.  I would urge Theodore to examine the evidence and arguments before passing judgment on another religious tradition.

Fourth, one must be careful about resorting to ad hominem attacks or imputing impure motives to those who hold to a certain belief.  His accusation that theosis was “invented by men to satisfy their fallen pride” is an ad hominem attack.  Furthermore, it claims to know the inner motives of those who hold to it.  Theodore would be better off presenting biblical and historical evidence showing that Scripture repudiates theosis and that the early church likewise rejected this teaching.  One cannot uncritically repeat what one has learned from secondary sources.

4. Hurling Anathemas

I recognize that there are significant differences between Eastern Orthodox and the Reformed traditions.  I constructed this site as a place where the two sides can learn from each other.  It is not constructive to come out announcing anathemas without having first engaged the other side.  If both sides hurled anathemas preemptively then we won’t be building bridges but rather walls of silence and hostility.  Theodore, what is your intent in citing Galatians 1:8?  Wouldn’t it be better to build bridges?

As a former Evangelical and one who studied at a conservative Reformed seminary I am quite familiar with Galatians 1:8.  I would like to note that one cannot just cite Galatians 1:8 and be done with that.  The controversy that the Apostle Paul had with the first century Judaizers was very different from the controversy between the sixteenth century Roman Catholics and Protestants.  Theodore needs to show how the situation in Galatians applies to the actual (not alleged) teachings of Eastern Orthodoxy.  The absence of citations from authoritative Orthodox sources makes me wonder how familiar he is with the Orthodox Church.  Without this informed understanding Theodore risks sounding like a Bible thumper.  I am confident that he can present a more balanced and nuanced argument.

5. Reasons for Converting to Orthodoxy

It is disturbing to find a personal attack in paragraph #6.  Theodore writes: Those of you roaming about from denomination to denomination searching for something to make you feel better about yourselves need to grapple with the fact that all the golden robes, gaudy temples, jewel-encrusted icons, clouds of incense and humanly invented theater in the universe are not going to get you any nearer (let alone into!) heaven…

It may be that some people are drawn to Orthodox worship because of its rich aesthetics but a stronger case can be made from Scripture.  We find in Exodus chapters 25 to 40 God giving Moses instructions for the construction of the Tabernacle.  The instructions called for an ornate place of worship that included heavily decorated vestments, images of angels worked into the curtains, and incense.  If Orthodox liturgical worship is patterned after the Old Testament worship how can one claim that it is not biblical?  Rather one must raise the question whether or not it is the Reformed churches who have abandoned true biblical worship with their bare four walls and ministers who wear robes patterned after that of university professors.

Reformed Worship vs. Biblical Worship

Burning Incense

I have two questions for Theodore in closing.  In Malachi 1:11 we read: “For from the rising of the sun even to it going down, My name has been glorified among the Gentiles; and in every place incense shall be offered to My name, and a pure offering, for my name shall be great among the Gentiles  (NKJV).”  Here we have a prediction that when the Christ comes incense would be a sign of worship in the Messianic age.  The incense offered in Jewish worship would be offered by the Gentiles in the age to come.  Does your local church offer incense during its worship?  If your church does not offer incense, why has it abandoned the biblical pattern of worship?

In Hebrews 13:10 we read: “We have an altar from which those who serve the tabernacle have no right to eat (NKJV).”  The early Christians believed that Christ’s death on the cross was the fulfillment of the Jewish sacrificial system.  The Jewish priests were not allowed access to the Eucharist because they did not recognize Jesus as the Messiah.   Historically, Christian churches had an altar where the Eucharist was celebrated in the Sunday liturgy.  Does your church have an altar?  Does it celebrate the Eucharist every Sunday as in the case of historic Christian worship?  If your church does not follow the historic pattern, why has it abandoned the historic pattern of worship?

Robert Arakaki

 

March for Life & Great Tradition

 

Born in the USA - Metropolitan Jonah, OCA

Metropolitan Jonah, OCA

March For Life Monday

Monday, January 23 is March for Life Monday.  It is an annual rally in protest of the US Supreme Court Roe vs. Wade decision which legalized abortion in America.  It began in 1974 with an estimated 20,000 in attendance.  Since then March for Life has grown in size over the years to over 200,000 in recent years.

March for Life brings together people from the Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox traditions.  Metropolitan Jonah, who heads the Orthodox Church in America, has played an active role in recent marches and rallies.

The pro-life stance is intrinsic to the Christian Faith.  Historically, the Faith of the Church consisted not only of a set of doctrines but also a moral code.  The Church has been pro-life from early on.  We find in the first century The Didache II.2 a prohibition against abortion: “thou shalt not procure abortion, nor commit infanticide.”  Thus, being pro-life is integral to being Orthodox.

Pro-Life Icons

Icon – Mary the God Bearer

Orthodoxy’s pro-life stance can be seen in the icons of Mary the Theotokos (the God Bearer).  This icon is known as the icon of “The Sign,” a reference to Isaiah 7:14: “Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son…. (NKJV).”  In many Orthodox churches there is on the front wall over the altar an image of Mary, over her midsection is a circle depicting the Christ Child.  This circle symbolizes Mary’s womb and thus teaches that the Incarnation includes the nine months that the Christ Child spent in her womb as an unborn child.  In light of Irenaeus of Lyons’ doctrine of recapitulation, Christ the Second Adam saves us by recapitulating (retracing or reenacting) the whole of human life: from gestation, to infancy, to maturity, to his death, resurrection, and ascension to heaven.

 

The Reformed Tradition

With respect to the Reformed tradition, we find a similar pro-life stance.  Karl Barth wrote in his Church Dogmatics (II/4, 415ff.):

Karl Barth — Reformed Theologian

The unborn child is from the very first a child.  It is still developing and has no independent life.  But it is a man and not a thing, nor a mere part of the mother’s body….He who destroys germinating life kills a man….The fact that a definite No must be the presupposition of all further discussion cannot be contested, least of all today” (quoted in The Evangelical Theological Dictionary, p. 4)

Being pro-life is intrinsic to the Christian Faith.  To abandon this moral code as described in the Didache is in effect to abandon the Faith.  For this reason Orthodox Christians have more in common with the conservative Evangelicals than the mainline Protestants who have abandoned the church’s historic pro-life stance on abortion.

Anti-Abortion vs. Pro-Life

There is a difference between being anti-abortion and being pro-life.  The anti-abortion stance can be rooted and confined to a legalistic morality; the pro-life stance draws its spiritual motivation from life affirming love.  The pro-life stance allows for an expansive moral framework that includes not just the unborn, but also the newly born, the weak, the frail, those who are sick or elderly, and the strangers in our midst.  Taken this way one can detect pro-life themes in parables like The Good Samaritan and The Prodigal Son.  The Good Samaritan story teaches us that even a healthy man can become our neighbor in need.  The Good Samaritan (Christ) comes to the aid of the stricken man and takes him the Inn (the Church).  The Prodigal Son story teaches us that life apart from the Father’s love leads to ruin and destruction, and that true life is found in the return to the Father’s loving embrace.

Roe vs. Wade marks a watershed event in American history.  It marks a turn away from the Constantinian paradigm which assumed a political order informed by Christian values.  As we move increasingly into what looks like a post-Christian society it is imperative that Christians from various traditions find common ground in the Great Tradition.

On March for Life Monday let us remember Mary the Theotokos (the God Bearer) who affirmed life by carrying Christ in her womb for 9 months.  Let us remember Jesus Christ who once like all of us was an unborn child.

Robert Arakaki

New Apostles or Old Heresy? An Orthodox Perspective on the New Apostolic Reformation

 

New "Apostle" Cindy Jacob

New “Apostle” Cindy Jacob

I was recently asked to help organize a memorial service for a mutual friend.  When I was told that the “Apostle Johnson” would be doing the service, I didn’t know quite what to make of it.  I knew of the Apostle Paul who traveled around the Roman Empire planting churches and writing authoritative epistles that churches were obligated to follow.  The Apostle Peter was the fisherman who made the famous confession: “Thou art the Christ” and later founded the Church in Rome.  Was this modern day “apostle” like the original Apostles?  Can there be such a thing as a modern day Apostle?

Protestantism is known for its incredible variety of churches, doctrines, and worship styles.  It can be divided into several streams: (1) mainstream churches that have some connection with historic Christianity, (2) Evangelicalism which emphasizes the Bible and being born again, (3) Pentecostalism which emphasizes the baptism in the Holy Spirit, and signs and wonders, and (4) more recently, the New Apostolic Reformation.

C. Peter Wagner, a retired Fuller Seminary professor, wrote extensively about this new movement.  He coined the name “New Apostolic Reformation” to describe a trend taking place among African Independent churches, the house church movement in China, and Pentecostal churches in Latin America.  He sees all this as part of the ongoing development of new wineskins in church history.  “Every time Jesus began building His Church in a new way throughout history, He provided new wineskins.”

Pentecostalism began in the early 1900s teaching the restoration of healing gifts, miracles, and the gift of tongues.  This created controversy among Protestants who believed that these gifts ceased with the passing of the original Apostles.  Also, where traditional Protestants put the emphasis on the Bible, Pentecostals place emphasis on the Holy Spirit.  More recently, there emerged a new teaching that God is restoring the lost offices of church governance, namely the office of prophet and apostle.

The claim for the restoration of the offices of prophet and apostle is significant.  The office of pastor and teacher is based upon the careful study of the Bible.  There is a certain amount of equality and accountability with the Bible teacher.  If one disagrees with the teacher, both sides can study together what the Bible passage says.  But how does one respond to: “The Lord told me to do this” or “Thus says the Lord….”?  Unless one can claim a similar direct link to the Holy Spirit, how can one challenge this?  One runs the risk of defying the direct will of God or worse yet submitting to spiritual deception.  The risk in the restoration of the governing ministries is that church authority affects doctrine, worship, and ultimately our relationship with God.

Professor Wagner noticed that many of the New Apostolic Reformation churches are experiencing rapid growth.  They have lively worship services full of dedicated members and are engaged in a wide array of ministries.  Wagner views this new trend positively.  He believes that church history is a story of constant change in which God uses different wineskins (church structures) for different time periods.  He notes that where traditional churches are stuck in the past, these new churches are future oriented.  But in his description and analysis of the New Apostolic Reformation churches he neglected to say how these churches maintain moral accountability and how they would be able to maintain right doctrine and not go veering off into heresy.  What safeguards are in place to ensure that these new churches would not end up becoming bizarre cults under the thrall of an out of control leader?

 

Apostolic Tradition

The New Apostolic Reformation movement is essentially an off shoot of the Protestant Reformation and as such is based upon the errors of Protestantism.  Protestantism teaches that all we need for being a Christian is the Bible alone.  This teaching is erroneous.  There are passages that teach the divine inspiration of Scripture, the divine authority of Scripture, and inerrancy of Scripture, but nowhere does the Bible teach “the Bible alone.”  Another problem with the Protestant doctrine of “the Bible alone” is the question of how we understand and interpret the Bible.  Many times the “Bible alone” has resulted in churches and fellowships being built around the personal interpretation of a pastor.  So long as the minister up on stage has a Bible in his hand and swears that the Bible is the word of God then it is assumed that what he is teaching must be theologically sound even if it sounds new and different.

The Orthodox Church takes a more biblical approach.  It follows Paul’s second letter to the Thessalonians:

Therefore, brethren, stand fast and hold the traditions which you were taught, whether by word or our epistle.  (II Thessalonians 2:15)

Here we see two kinds of traditions: oral and written; both are important to the Christian faith.  Like the Thessalonians we are called to hold on to and take our stand on the apostolic tradition in both forms.  C. Peter Wagner says nothing about apostolic tradition.  For him tradition and being traditional means being stuck in the past.  It seems that Wagner is more concerned about moving on, moving ahead to something new.  But this is not what we find in the Apostle Paul.

In the last days of his life Paul wrote to Timothy several letters.  Timothy was his student, assistant, and his successor in ministry.  In II Timothy 1:13-14 Paul wrote:

Hold fast the pattern of sound words which you have heard from me, in faith and love which are in Christ Jesus.  That good thing which was committed to you, keep by the Holy Spirit who dwells in us.  (NKJV)

Paul is intent that his message be passed intact on to future generations.  We see this in II Timothy 2:2:

And the things that you have heard from me among many witnesses, commit these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.  (NKJV)

It is important that we understand what is going on here.  We are not reading about a typical ordination to the pastorate of a local church.  What Paul has in mind here is something akin to the continuing of the apostolic ministry.  This special ministry involves the planting of new churches and the supervision of a network of local churches.  Here Paul is laying the biblical basis for the office of the bishop.

Church government in the early church was episcopal — under the rule of the bishop, the successor to the apostles.  It was not congregational – where each local church was autonomous.  Nor was it presbyterian – where a local network of churches would come together to decide matters of faith and practice.  It was episcopal because this was the practice of the apostles and the early church.  Doctrine was not decided on by the local churches; it was received through a chain of apostolic tradition.  This way the Christians were assured that what they believed was the true teaching of Christ.

As the early church spread across the vast Roman Empire it remained unified in doctrine, worship, and leadership.  Irenaeus of Lyons, who lived in the second century, wrote:

Having received this preaching and this faith, as I have said, the Church, although scattered in the whole world, carefully preserves it, as if living in one house.  She believes these things [everywhere] alike, as if she had but one heart and one soul, and preaches them harmoniously, teaches them, and hands them down, as if she had but one mouth.

One could not be a Christian apart from belonging to the Church.  In the early Church there was no such thing as an independent Christian.  Nor was there such a thing as a Protestant Christian who relied solely on the Bible for guidance in faith and practice.  This high view of the Church is rooted in Scripture.  Paul wrote:

…I write so that you may know how you ought to conduct yourself in the house of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth.  (II Timothy 3:15, NKJV)

For the past two thousand years the Orthodox Church has faithfully guarded the Apostolic Tradition that Paul passed on to Timothy.  For this reason the Orthodox Church today looks very much like the early church described in the historical records.  But when Evangelicals and Protestants study the early church they find themselves looking at a church so unlike theirs.

 

The Fall of the Church Theory

One fundamental premise for Protestantism is the belief that somewhere along the way the early Church left the apostolic teachings and became corrupt and worldly.  This is known as the fall of the church theory.  The problem with this theory is that no one has been able to pin point the time and place of this crucial transition.  No serious church historian teaches the fall of the church.  This view is largely held by those with limited theological education.

The early church shared a common faith for the first millennium.  Then in 1054 the Church of Rome broke off ties with the Churches of the East.  This break came to be known as the Great Schism.  Following that tragic event, the Roman Church began to evolve in ways while the Eastern Churches remained unchanged.  As the Roman Church moved further and further away from its historical roots, doctrinal innovations began to emerge that would trigger the Protestant Reformation.  Where Orthodoxy was deeply troubled by the innovations of the Roman Catholic Church, it was even more disturbed by Protestant innovations.  Despite the Protestant claims to be a reformed church and much like the early church, Orthodoxy would have none of that.  It has charitably labeled Protestants heterodox or more bluntly heretical.

Protestantism is based upon an ongoing quest for the true church.  There is the belief that the church must continually undergo reformation.  C. Peter Wagner understood church history to be very fluid and evolving, that God builds his in different ways using different kinds of wineskins for each period.  He sees the New Apostolic Reformation as the latest stage of church development.  But for the Orthodox there are features of the New Apostolic Reformation that resembles the old heresies that the Orthodox Church combated in her early days.

 

An Old Heresy?

One of the earliest heresies was the heresy of Gnosticism.  The Gnostics believed that physical matter was inferior to the spirit realm.  They did not outright reject the church or the bishops but believed that they possessed a secret superior knowledge (gnosis).  They believed that because the bishops’ teaching authority rested on the institutional authority it was inferior to theirs which was based on divine illumination by the Holy Spirit and by a secret esoteric theology.

One must be careful when comparing the New Apostolic Reformation movement with ancient Gnostic heresy.  From what I’ve read in C. Peter Wagner many of the New Apostolic Reformation church leaders have not gone to the extreme of denying the Incarnation.  But it appears to me that Gnostic ideas do influence the way they understand the church, church authority, worship, and doctrine.

One of the basic Gnostic beliefs is a dualism that makes the physical and institutional inferior to the spiritual.  This is especially evident in the way Protestants and the New Apostolic Reformation movement view the capital “C” Church.  Orthodoxy believes that the one true Church is a visible Church evidenced by the local church gathered around the Eucharist, the confession of the Creed, and the office of the bishop.  Protestants and the New Apostolic Reformation followers believe that all these are non-essential externals.  They believe that the capital “C” Church is the invisible church.  For them the outward form does not matter as much as the inward faith in Christ.

The New Apostolic Reformation churches claim to have restored the ministries of the prophets and apostles.  But it seems that their new apostles come out of nowhere.  They make no claim to being part of a historic chain of succession.  They claim to be apostles because of the anointing of the Holy Spirit and because of this anointing they have authority over churches.  However, it must be kept in mind that even in Paul’s time there was the danger of false apostles (see II Corinthians 10-12).  In the early Church one could not just say, ‘The Lord has called me to be an apostle.’  The apostolic ministry was a foundational ministry; it was based upon having been in Jesus’ company, hearing him teach, and being a witness to the risen Christ.  None of the new apostles can make this claim as Jesus’ earthly life and ministry took place two thousand years ago.

The Orthodox Church rests upon a chain of Apostolic Tradition received by the bishops from their predecessors.  Apostolic succession in Orthodoxy is not done in secret.  One of the clergy is selected and elevated to the office of the bishop.  The elevation of the priest to the office of bishop is a public event.  Irenaeus of Lyons wrote:

The tradition of the apostles, made clear in all the world, can be clearly seen in every church by those who wish to behold the truth.  We can enumerate those who were established by the apostles as bishops in the churches, and their successors down to our time, none of whom taught or thought of anything like their [the Gnostics] mad ideas (AH 3.3.1, Richardson 1970:371).

A modern person can laugh at the idea that the Orthodox Church keeps a list of bishops that goes back to the original Apostles, but why are they laughing?  Is it because they find the idea of lists and institutional order inferior to the exciting new apostle they just heard at a mass rally?  A rally full of lively music and stirring preaching may be emotionally fulfilling but is this the truth?  Truth is not based on feelings but on fact.

There is a crisis of truth in contemporary Protestantism.  For many Christians a church or teaching is true because: ‘I can feel it inside me’ or ‘I feel the Holy Spirit speaking to me’ or ‘I felt convicted by the Spirit.’  Orthodox Truth is based upon the historicity of the Incarnation.  The Orthodox Church is committed to keeping the Apostolic Tradition without change until the Second Coming of Christ.

So, if an Orthodox Christian were to meet one of the so-called new apostles, his response would be: (1) that there is only one holy catholic and apostolic church and that church is the Orthodox Church, (2) his bishop is a true successor to the original Apostles, and (3) unless one is in communion with the Orthodox Church one is outside the true Church.  Outside of this chain of apostolic succession there can be no apostolic ministry.  The original Apostles laid the foundations in the first century and the Orthodox Church has been faithfully building on that foundation for the past two millennia.  What the so-called New Apostles are attempting to do is to create another church, not return to the original church.  Because these so-called new apostles are false those who follow their teachings are susceptible to heresy and spiritual deception.

 

Another Old Heresy?

Another early heresy was the Montanist heresy.  This group was also known as the “New Prophecy.”   Montanus, a convert to Christianity in the second century, believed that he was a prophet of God.  He taught that the Second Coming was about to happen and that this was signaled by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.  The Montanist movement practiced speaking in tongues and prophetic utterances.  In response to the growing formalization of the church Montanus and his followers sought to emphasize the spiritual aspects of Christianity.  They believed that they were the elite ‘spiritual’ Christians and would be part of the New Jerusalem.  Where the orthodox bishops interpreted Scripture based upon a tradition received from the Apostles, the Montanists relied on prophetic utterances from the Holy Spirit believing that these cleared up ambiguities in Scripture.  Thus, the Montanist prophets presented a teaching authority independent of the bishops.  It also threatened to move the early Church from a teaching authority based on apostolic tradition to one based on prophetic utterances and visions.

 

An Eastern Orthodox Response

It appears that the New Apostolic Reformation movement encourages new prophetic teachings independent of the historic Church.  Having no anchor in the history and tradition of the Church, they are at risk of drifting into false teachings.  Another weakness is that more emphasis is given to self-fulfillment than to holy living and denying the passions of the flesh.  One of the biggest draw of the New Apostolic Reformation church services is that they are packed with people, lively praise music, and stirring Bible teachings.  People leave these services on a spiritual high.  But is that the purpose of Christian worship?  Where is the call to repentance and holy living?

The preaching of the forgiveness of sins detached from the call to repentance and to holy living is a serious distortion of the Good News of Christ.  At the heart of the Gospel and Christian discipleship is the Cross.  Jesus said:

If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.  For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it.  (Matthew 16:24-25, NKJV)

True Christianity is about truth; it is not about what makes me feel good.  True Christianity is also about Christ dying on the Cross and our dying with him.  Only in dying with Christ will we become sharers in his resurrection.  The kingdom of God is based upon the true teachings of Christ.  It is open to investigation and study.  The Orthodox Church has a historic link that goes back to the original Apostles.  This is something that neither the Protestants, the Evangelicals, the Pentecostals, nor the New Apostolic Reformation can claim.  In response to the Gnostic heretics, Irenaeus presented the true Gnosis (Knowledge) that is in Christianity:

This is true Gnosis: the teaching of the apostles, and the ancient institution of the church, spread throughout the entire world, and the distinctive mark of the body of Christ in accordance with the succession of bishops, to whom the apostles entrusted each local church, and the unfeigned preservation, coming down to us, of the scriptures, with a complete collection allowing for neither addition nor subtraction, a reading without falsification and, in conformity with the scriptures, so interpretation that is legitimate, careful, without danger of blasphemy (AH 4.33.8, Grant 1997:161).  

 

Conclusion: Broken Wineskins and Spiritual Drunkenness

Charismatic Worship

Charismatic Worship

The other problem is that of spiritual drunkenness.  Many people are drawn to the New Apostolic Reformation churches because they provide powerful worship experiences.  Oftentimes Pentecostals and charismatics describe worship in terms of getting high on God.  But there is a danger here of becoming dependent on spiritual highs.  What happens when one no longer gets a spiritual high in worship?  What happens when one enters into a spiritual desert?  In the story of the Prodigal Son the younger son left home and had a great time spending his inheritance money.  The good times lasted only so long then famine struck and he was reduced to extreme poverty.  When he hit rock bottom, he came to himself and realized that he needed to go back home.  Many people in the New Apostolic Reformation are having a great time right now and have no interest in Orthodoxy but when they get tired of the superficiality of charismatic worship or when they can’t get the spiritual highs like before the time may come for them to consider the Orthodox Church.

Orthodox Worship

Many charismatics won’t enjoy Orthodox liturgy the first time; this is much like an alcoholic drinking clean water after drinking from the bottle for a long time.  Unlike charismatic worship which emphasizes spiritual high, Orthodox worship emphasizes spiritual sobriety.  The soberness of Orthodox worship brings clarity and stillness of spirit that leads to spiritual wisdom and transformation.  “Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God.”

Robert Arakaki

 

 

 

References

AH = Adversus Haeresis “Against the Heretics” by Irenaeus of Lyons.

Robert M. Grant, trans. 1997.  Irenaeus of Lyons.  London and New York: Routledge.

Wagner, C. Peter.  2009.  “C. Peter Wagner Explains the New Apostolic Reformation.”  Talk To Action: Reclaiming Citizenship History and Faith.  By Bruce Wilson.  http://www.talk2action.org/story/2009/5/28/19033/8502  Visited 20 December 2011.

 

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