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Category: Reformed Theology (Page 16 of 19)

A Protestant Exodus? – My Response to Peter Leithart

 

Maria Lago Studio "Exodus" Source

Maria Lago Studio “Exodus” Source

In Rev. Peter Leithart’s recent column for First Things: “The tragedy of conversion” (7 October 2013), he describes as tragic Protestants who acquired the taste for “catholicity and unity” and instead of remaining Protestant go so far as to convert to the Orthodox Church or to Rome.  This is a crisis affecting Protestantism in general and the Federal Vision movement in particular.  The New York Times published an article in 2009 about this trend: “More Protestants Find a Home in Orthodox Antioch Church.

The recent exodus while not large in number is significant.  Scott Hahn, a former Presbyterian seminary professor, wrote about his conversion in Rome Sweet Home.  Other notable converts include Thomas Howard and Francis Beckwith, former president of the Evangelical Theological Society.  More recently, a certain amount of controversy surrounded Jason Stellman.  Ironically, it was Pastor Stellman whom the PCA assigned to be the lead prosecutor for Leithart’s heresy trial!

On the Eastern Orthodox side the late Peter Gillquist tells the story how he and his fellow Campus Crusade for Christ co-workers became Orthodox in his book Becoming OrthodoxClark Carlton is a former Baptist seminarian and Matthew Gallatin a former Calvary Chapel pastor.  Frank Schaeffer, son of the famous Evangelical thinker, Francis Schaeffer, converted to Orthodoxy.  One prominent convert is the late Jaroslav Pelikan, world renowned Yale University professor who authored the five volume The Christian Tradition.  Michael Hyatt, former CEO of Thomas Nelson Publications and a former ruling elder in the PCA, is now a deacon serving the Orthodox Church.

When one looks at the kind of people exiting Protestantism, we see some of the most seasoned, serious, and brightest people of the Evangelical world: seminarians, seminary professors, pastors, authors, publishers, leaders of leading Evangelical organizations.  One has to ask: What is going on here!?!

My assessment is that Protestantism having lost its theological center has become a fractured and confusing, if not volatile and unstable.  Troubled by this state of confusion many are seeking refuge in the historic early Church.  This is the backdrop to Leithart’s recent column.

 

Protestantism’s Meltdown

In the first half of the twentieth century American Protestantism was divided principally between liberals and conservatives.  Then in the 1950s and 1960s there was an influx of Pentecostalism into historic mainline Protestant churches.  The 1970s marked the beginning of the shift to post-denominational Protestantism.  More recently, American Protestantism saw the rise of mega churches whose seeker friendly services downplayed doctrine.   Church shopping became the new normal as people began to evaluate churches in terms of the services they had to offer instead of their teachings.

An ironic reaction to all this has been a growing ancient-future movement that sought to rediscover their roots in ancient Christianity.  Soon Evangelicals began having processions with acolytes carrying crosses, clergy wearing vestments, reciting the Nicene Creed, quoting early church fathers, and holding weekly Eucharist.  This return to the roots movement took several forms.  One was the Emergent Movement which attempted to be post-modern and eclectic in worship and doctrine.  Another was the Canterbury trail movement where people joined one of the various Anglican off-shoots from Episcopalianism.

Peter Leithart is part of the Federal Vision (FV) movement, a high church expression of Reformed theology that seeks to give greater emphasis to covenant theology, Trinitarian thinking, and the sacraments of baptism and Holy Communion – as did many if not most of the early Reformers.

Leithart and his FV colleagues believe themselves to be on the cutting edge of “the-future-church” and much closer to getting it right than say the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA) or the Orthodox Presbyterian Church (OPC).  In actuality, they are just another “new-and-improved” Reformed splinter group.  For them, a Christian moving from an older Protestant denomination–Methodist, Baptist, Anglican, or mainline Reformed—to the Federal Vision would be making a wise move in the right direction.

Given the peculiar way the FV folks understand “catholicity and unity,” it is no surprise that they think a Protestant converting to Orthodoxy is going in the wrong direction.  An even bigger problem for them is knowledgeable Reformed Christians from the Federal Vision jumping ship!  There is a quiet exodus from the FV to Orthodoxy under way right now. This is the growing crisis that the Rev. Peter Leithart is trying to head off.

 

800px-Border_Collie_sheepdog_trial

Keeping the sheep in line

A former PCA elder, currently an Orthodox catechumen, explained to me the implicit insult in his move towards Orthodoxy: “What!  You actually believe the Apostles and their disciples got the Faith right centuries ago . . . before our FV insights . . . . Grrrrr!!”  What adds to their grief and distress is that Pastor Leithart and his mentor Pastor James B. Jordan were two of the prominent CREC & PCA leaders who cracked open the door for their bright and zealous disciples to inquire into historic Orthodoxy with the unexpected results of some converting to Orthodoxy!  Now, they are writing articles like this one in an effort at damage control.  It seems to me that what Rev. Leithart is trying to do is keep people from straying off the Protestant reservation.

 

Leithart’s Theology of Time

hour20glass

Leithart’s opposition to Protestants converting to Orthodoxy stems from his understanding church history.

He writes:

Apart from all the detailed historical arguments, this quest makes an assumption about the nature of time, an assumption that I have labeled “tragic.”

It’s the assumption that the old is always purer and better, and that if we want to regain life and health we need to go back to the beginning (Emphasis added).

Leithart sees church history as progressive and dialectical.  For him, early Christianity was just the beginning of a long evolutionary journey and that the mature church of Protestantism is to be preferred over the infancy of early Christianity.  To dissuade Protestants from converting to Orthodoxy Leithart argues that the true Church is not to be found among the Protestants, Catholics, or Orthodox but ahead of us in the future.  He writes:

History is patterned in the same way.  Eden is not the golden time to which we return; it is the infancy from which we begin and grow up.  The golden age is ahead, in the Edenic Jerusalem.

This evolutionary approach to church history is congruent with postmillennialism favored by Reformed theologians.  It reminds me of Mercersburg Theology’s Philip Schaff who posited that church history is the outworking of a Hegelian dialect, that over time division will be resolved into deeper unity, and that over time heresy and error will be resolved into deeper truth.  This is radically at odds with how Orthodoxy understands truth and what the Bible teaches.

Leithart’s portrayal of time is based on a false characterization of the Orthodox understanding of time.  Time is not the issue here.  The issue here is the promise of the Holy Spirit Christ made to His Apostles in the Upper Room discourse (John 13-16).  Was the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost to be a brief flash of inspiration for the Apostles and their disciples?  Or did the Holy Spirit come to inhabit the Church permanently, “abide with you forever” (John 14:16)?  For the Orthodox these are not difficult questions.  Christ’s promises were proven true not only in the book of Acts but in subsequent church history.  For Orthodox Christians the Holy Spirit guided the early Church through the Ecumenical Councils and continues to guide the Church.  This is very different from the Blinked-Out/Blinked-On theory of church history prevalent among Protestants.  This theory assumes that the light went out in the early Church and did not come back on until the Protestant Reformation.  The Orthodox understanding of Holy Tradition and the Bible arising out of Holy Tradition means that the Apostles got their teachings directly from Christ and the Holy Spirit.  Neither Scripture nor Tradition are dependent on Rev. Leithart’s notion that time is the crucial factor or his implicit evolutionary assumption “new is always better.”

 

The Faith Once and for All Delivered to the Saints

The Bible rules out an evolutionary understanding of theology.  We find in Jude 3:

Beloved, while I was very diligent to write to you concerning our common salvation, I found it necessary to write to you exhorting you to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints. (Emphasis added; OSB)

There are three important points made in this short verse.  One, the word πιστει (pistei, faith) has the definite article which indicates that the writer has in mind a body of truth or a set of doctrines.  This points to one true Faith, not multiple versions as would be assumed by Leithart’s theory of history.  Two, the word παραδοθειση (paradotheise, aorist passive participle, delivered) points to a traditioning process.  Reinecker’s Linguistic Key to the Greek New Testament has this to say about παραδοθειση:

The word is used for handing down authorized tradition in Israel (s. 1 Cor. 15:1-3; 2 Thess. 3:6), and Jude is therefore saying that the Christian apostolic tradition is normative for the people of God (Green).  (p. 803)

The Christian Faith is not something discovered through rational study of the Bible or the result of creative engagement with culture, but received from the Apostles.  Protestant theology with its sola scriptura assumes that Christian doctrine arises from the study of Scripture independent of Tradition.  This is a novel theological method alien to that of the early Church Fathers.  Three, the word ‘απαξ (hapax) points to a unique one-time revelation.  The same word used in Hebrews 9:28 to describe Christ’s unique one-time sacrifice on the Cross.   That one time revelation was the Incarnation of the Word of God in Jesus Christ.  Jesus taught his Apostles the Faith they were to teach the nations.  As recipients of the Apostolic Tradition we are obligated to safeguard it from change until the Lord returns at the Second Coming.  Thus, if we take Jude 3 at face value we have no choice but to reject Rev. Leithart’s evolutionary approach to Christian doctrine.

Another telling and related bible verse few Protestants seem to notice is 2 Thessalonians 2:15: “Therefore, stand fast and hold the traditions which you were taught, whether by words or our epistle.” (Emphasis added; OSB)  Note that the verb used here is “stand fast” (στηκεν), not to move ahead.  This sense of standing one’s ground can be found in Paul’s use of the same Greek word in 1 Corinthians 16:13 and Galatians 5:1.

If one holds to the traditioning model of theology then antiquity becomes a very important criterion for theological orthodoxy.  Antiquity is important, not because older is better but because antiquity is one of the distinguishing markers of apostolicity. Apostolicity without antiquity is sheer nonsense.  That is why unbroken apostolic succession is so important.  This leaves Protestants seeking the early Church with only two choices: acceptance of Orthodoxy’s Holy Tradition or submission to the Roman Pontiff.  Anglicanism, despite its having bishops, because it originated from a schismatic break with Rome, cannot claim unbroken continuity.

 

Coming to Zion

St. Seraphim Cathedral - Dallas, Texas

St. Seraphim Cathedral – Dallas, Texas

 

The fundamental problem with Rev. Leithart’s approach to church history is his understanding of time as χρονος (chronos).   It omits the understanding of history as καιρος (kairos).  Because of the Incarnation of the divine Word, human history is no longer trapped by chronological time.  Because the Kingdom of God has broken into human history the golden age Leithart longs for is present in the Liturgy.  Orthodox worship involves the shift from chronos to kairos.  Frederica Mathewes-Green describes in At the Corner of East and Now a typical Orthodox Sunday service:

This first service of the day is called the “Kairon,” from the Greek word for time.  Not chronos, orderly measured time, but kairos, the right time, the moment-in-time, the time of fulfillment.  Worship lifts us out of ordinary time into the eternal now.  At the beginning of the Divine Liturgy, the deacon says to the priest, “It is time for the Lord to act.” (p. 15)

For Orthodoxy the golden era of Christianity is now.  We are not moving towards Mount Zion, we are already at Mount Zion.  We read in Hebrews 12:22-24:

But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church of the firstborn who are registered in heaven, to God the Judge of all to the spirits of just men made perfect, to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than that of Abel. (Emphasis added; OSB)

The first thing to note is the opening phrase “you have come.”  The Greek for “have come” is προσεληλυθατε (proseleluthate) which is the perfect active indicative form of “come to” or “draw near.”  The perfect means: you have already come to Mount Zion, not you will come one day in the future come to Mount Zion.  This passage in Hebrews 12 describes what happens every time we celebrate the Divine Liturgy.

 

"The Lamb of God is broken and shared, broken but divided; forever eaten yet never consumed, but sanctifying those who partake of Him."

“The Lamb of God is broken and shared, broken but not divided; forever eaten yet never consumed, . . .”

 

The Church is the city of the living God, not in the process of becoming the city of God.  In the Eucharist the local congregation gathers as the people of God to join in the eternal worship of heaven.  As we transition into the second half of the Liturgy the Trisagion hymn reminds us that in the Eucharist we are surrounded by an innumerable number of angels.  When I look around the church I see icons of the saints, “the spirits of just men made perfect.”  As we go up for Holy Communion we see the communion chalice which contains the blood of Christ which speaks more powerfully than that of Abel’s.  Thus, Hebrews 12:22-24 describes the Orthodox Liturgy.  Gabe Martini notes in his response to Rev. Leithart:

In the Eucharistic fellowship of the Church, we are ever-united with all the Saints of history, both past and present. Our orientation is eschatological, and eschatology is not merely “the future,” in a strictly linear sense. This is nowhere more pronounced than in our celebration of the Eucharist, which is an event that points the faithful towards the east—not merely towards Eden or the beginnings of a nostalgic faith, but towards the great wedding feast of the Lamb. This is played out not only in our written tradition and services, but also in our iconography of the Mystical Supper, which shows both Jesus and the apostles not in a dingy upper room of first-century Palestine but at the table of the wedding feast in eternity.

 

Scene+from+the+film+TitanicThus, if Rev. Leithart’s theological argument is flawed, then Protestants should give serious consideration to converting to Orthodoxy.  Crossing the Bosphorus presents a way out of a current situation in Protestantism that Leithart described as “agonizing.”  It involves leaving a sinking ship for a more structurally sound vessel.  If Protestantism is a sinking ship, the real tragedy would be for one to go down with the ship and not help others cross over to a better, more stable and historic boat.  I would urge Rev. Leithart and other Protestants to reconsider their position.

 

The Blessings of Crossing Over

The Bosphorus Strait

The Bosphorus Strait

People convert for various reasons.  Part of what prompted my converting to Orthodoxy was Protestantism’s theological incoherence.  Despite the initial appeal of sola scriptura I found Protestantism’s lack of Tradition has resulted in hermeneutical havoc.  My research led me to the unexpected conclusion that Protestantism’s hermeneutical chaos was intrinsic to sola Scriptura!  When I discovered the Ecumenical Councils and the notion of Holy Tradition I found a stable framework for reading Scripture.  One unanticipated blessing was Orthodoxy’s rich tradition of spirituality which taught me about the need for denying the passions the flesh and the cultivation of humility for spiritual growth in Christ.  Another benefit in converting to Orthodoxy is that I found myself receiving the Eucharist in the same church as that of the ancient fathers like John Chrysostom, Basil the Great, Athanasius the Great, Cyril of Jerusalem etc.  I find great comfort knowing that I am now in the one holy catholic and apostolic Church confessed in the Nicene Creed.  I no longer find myself yearning to be part of that Church because I am now at home.  I pray other yearning Protestants will find a home in the Orthodox Church.

Robert Arakaki

See Also

Rev. Peter Leithart:  “Too catholic to be Catholic.”

Robert Arakaki: “Unintentional Schism? A Response to Peter Leithart’s ‘Too catholic to be Catholic.”

Robert Arakaki:  “Crossing the Bosphorus.”

Are Conversions to Orthodoxy Tragic? A Response to Leithart

Folks,   Today’s posting contains Gabe Martini’s excellent response to Peter Leithart.  I will be uploading my response to Rev. Leithart shortly.  Robert

 

Are conversions to Orthodoxy tragic?

This is a continuing notion from Leithart and other, similar Protestants, who have adopted certain aspects of the Catholic tradition while refusing to adopt the fullness of the Body of Christ. This it not to say (at all) that Dr. Leithart is not a Christian, but that his approach to Christianity remains bodiless—an adoption of ideas and theories, but not the living and Spirit-filled community that has embodied such ideas and theories.

Are Conversions to Orthodoxy Tragic?

In his latest post at First Things, Leithart laments about “cross-Christian conversions,” naming them “tragic.”

Leithart does not deem these tragic necessarily because they are to the detriment of the convert themselves, but because the “logic behind some conversions” is flawed. According to Leithart, the quest for “the true church” is such flawed logic, and the “assumptions” behind such a movement are nothing short of “un-Christian.”

These are bold claims, especially from those who repackage Patristic theology for an audience under-exposed to both Patristics and the Catholic tradition. But, I digress. The real point of responding to this assertion of “tragedy” is that it misses the mark in a number of important ways.

First, Leithart claims that seeking out the true church is un-Christian. He explains:

Apart from all the detailed historical arguments, this quest makes an assumption about the nature of time, an assumption that I have labeled “tragic.” It’s the assumption that the old is always purer and better, and that if we want to regain life and health we need to go back to the beginning.

While many apologetics of Orthodoxy (and Rome) are centered around returning to the “original Church,” this is not a linear movement. Holy Tradition is not “older is better,” and our Tradition is not a lifeless stack of books, but the continuing life and work of both Christ and the Holy Spirit in Christ’s one, holy Body.

In fact, there is nothing more Deistic or backwards-facing than classical Protestantism, with sola scriptura and the perspicuity and self-sufficiency of the (Protestant canon of the) Bible. Sola scriptura claims that God—through his prophets and apostles—has left us a set of books by which one is to both understand and determine everything regarding faith and life. But the way to interpret this set of books was not included, and no interpretation is without subjectivity, nor is it the result of osmosis.

As a result, hundreds of denominations or new, individual church movements are started every year. Despite the claims to perspicuity, no two people within Protestantism agree on the right interpretation of any given sets of verses, and this even within their own, segregated, confessional communions. Leithart understands this very well, himself having been put under scrutiny by his own presbytery on a number of occasions, with each side talking past the other regarding the proper interpretation of both the Bible and the Westminster Standards.

On the other hand, the Orthodox faith teaches that we are not abandoned by God with either a single set of books (the Bible) or an old, static thing called tradition. We are not always looking back, but are instead transformed through the Body and Blood of Christ to a communion that transcends both time and place.

In the Eucharistic fellowship of the Church, we are ever-united with all the Saints of history, both past and present. Our orientation is eschatological, and eschatology is not merely “the future,” in a strictly linear sense. This is nowhere more pronounced than in our celebration of the Eucharist, which is an event that points the faithful towards the east—not merely towards Eden or the beginnings of a nostalgic faith, but towards the great wedding feast of the Lamb. This is played out not only in our written tradition and services, but also in our iconography of the Mystical Supper, which shows both Jesus and the apostles not in a dingy upper room of first-century Palestine but at the table of the wedding feast in eternity.

We certainly believe that the apostolic Church is the source of life and health for the faithful Christian, but this is not a return to “the beginning,” but rather an adoption into a timeless family. A family that is oriented towards the east (a redundancy, I know); towards the second coming and the culmination of all things in Christ (which paradoxically restores us to a unity with God found heretofore only in Eden).

Our tradition is holy, since it is the tradition of the Holy Spirit. This means that it is grounded not in a place of the past, but in the dynamic life of the Life-giving Trinity. This is an essential aspect of the doctrine of the Communion of the Saints, as well: “Neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come … shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom. 8:38–39).

Leithart continues:

Truth is not just the Father; the Son – the supplement, the second, the one begotten – identifies Himself as Truth, and then comes a third, the Spirit, also Truth, the Spirit of Truth. Truth is not just in the Father; the fullness of Truth is not at the origin, but in the fullness of the divine life, which includes a double supplement to the origin.

Despite the appearance of Sabellianism, and a denial of orthodox triadology, I think I understand what Leithart is getting at here.

The tradition of the Church has borne a perspective that is more nuanced than Leithart appears to allow. The earthly bulwarks of our faith (throughout the centuries, and not just in the “early Church”) have pointed to a Trinity that ismonarchical, with the Father as “origin.” For example, the Father begets the Son, and the Spirit proceeds from the Father (in eternity). Still, Leithart rightly notes that truth is not only of the Father, but is also an essential aspect of both the Spirit and the Son. What’s important to emphasize here is that our Tradition originates and rests in the life of God himself; in the life of the Holy Trinity. Not just the Father, but the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Their roles in both revealing and preserving this Faith through synergy with the Church varies according to the divine person, but we must be careful not to conflate the persons for the sake of flawed arguments.

Leithart concludes:

History is patterned in the same way. Eden is not the golden time to which we return; it is the infancy from which we begin and grow up. The golden age is ahead, in the Edenic Jerusalem.

And the church’s history is patterned in the same way too. It’s disorienting to think that we have to press ahead rather than try to discover or recover the safety of an achieved ecclesia, disorienting because we can’t know or predict the future. But it’s the only assumption Trinitarians can consistently make: The ecclesial peace we seek is not behind us, but in front. We get there by following the pillar of fire that leads us to a land we do not know.

Orthodox Christians do not believe in a mythical “golden age” of the Church. Our hagiography makes this more than plain, as we recount one exile of a Saint or one new heresy after another. What we do believe in, however, is the continuing presence of the life and light of God in the Body of Christ. Because of this fact, we know that the Church is the true community and family of God. It is not a future reality to be anticipated, but neither is it a nostalgic idea of the past. It is a continuing, apostolic mission of God’s people, transformed and recreated into the image of Christ through the passage of time. When we face the east in worship (per St. Basil the Great in On the Holy Spirit), we are facing both Eden and the glorious and second coming. Leithart bifurcates along linear projections, when it is both inappropriate and even impossible to do so.

He is right in saying that we follow the “pillar of fire” as the Church, but this pillar is within each of us. It is not a distant figure that has left us only a book and a few thousand years in order to figure everything out. It is a personal witness and indwelling in the Body of Christ that warms and guides our souls towards the kingdom; a kingdom that can, in fact, be within each one of us in Christ (Luke 17:21).

So while Leithart brings up a few important concepts in this short argument against conversions to Orthodox-Catholic Christianity, he misses the mark when it comes to not only understanding Holy Tradition and the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church, but also limits this experience of the Church to a single direction, where no such limitation is warranted.

Conversion to the one, true Church is not tragic; it is a journey home. And this home is not found in any single point in time, but transcends all such limitations, being the very Body of the Eternal One.

Gabe Martini has a BA in Philosophy from Indiana University and serves as a subdeacon at Saint Sophia Greek Orthodox Church in Bellingham, WA. He is the editor-in-chief of On Behalf of All and is a Product Marketing Lead for Logos Bible Software.

Geneva Bible and the City on a Hill

 

Governor John Winthrop and his followers

Governor John Winthrop and his followers

Part 2 of 4.

Parts 1,  3, and  4.

One striking feature about the recent promotions of the Geneva Bible is the reworking of church history.  They depict a tyrannical King James who oppressed freedom loving Puritans and how the Geneva Bible played a pivotal role in the emergence of democracy in America, but history is more complicated than that.

 

The website for Studylight.org claims:

The notes also infuriated King James, since they allowed disobedience to tyrannical kings. King James went so far as to make ownership of the Geneva Bible a felony. He then proceeded to make his own version of the Bible, but without the marginal notes that had so disturbed him. Consequently, during King James’s reign, and into the reign of Charles I, the Geneva Bible was gradually replaced by the King James Bible.  (Emphasis added; Source)

In a similar vein we find Kirk Cameron claiming:

The English church had become little more than an arm of the State, and the English Reformation was losing steam.  Just then The Geneva Bible was providentially unleashed on a dark, discouraged, downtrodden people, and it was the spark for a Christian Reformation of life and culture the likes of which the world had never seen.  (Emphasis added; Source)

It would not be accurate to describe the Puritans as a freedom loving people.  There is a theocratic streak in the Puritan Project.  For example, in Scotland a law was passed mandating that everyone over a certain income purchase a copy of the Geneva Bible!  It seems to this writer that what the neo-Reformed are attempting to do is reimagine the past to advance their theological agenda.

Stoolball equipment from modern day reenactment event.

Stoolball equipment from modern day reenactment event.

Because of their strict biblicism the Pilgrims had a restrictive understanding of culture.  This can be seen in their views on Christmas which they saw as a Romish invention lacking biblical support and therefore contrary to the Christian way of life.

 

 

Nathaniel Philbrick in Mayflower (2006) described the first Christmas in the New World:

 

ALPP_-_Stool-BallFor the Pilgrims, Christmas was a day just like any other; for most of the Strangers from the Fortune, on the other hand, it was a religious holiday, and they informed Bradford that it was “against their consciences” to work on Christmas.  Bradford begrudgingly gave them the day off and led the rest of the men out for the usual day’s work.  But when they returned at noon, they found the once placid streets of Plymouth in a state of joyous bedlam.  The Strangers were playing games, including stool ball, a cricketlike game popular in the west of England.  This was typical of how most Englishmen spent Christmas, but this was not the way the members of a pious Puritan community were to conduct themselves.  Bradford proceeded to confiscate the gamesters’ balls and bats.  It was not fair, he insisted, that some played while others worked.  If they wanted to spend Christmas praying quietly at home, that was fine by him; “but there should be no gaming or reveling in the streets.” (p. 128)

This highly disciplined lifestyle was not a fluke but a consequence of the Pilgrims’ attempt to literally follow Paul’s admonition “come out among them, and be separate.”  The Pilgrims (aka Separatists) were Puritans who believed that the Church of England was not a true church of Christ.  In light of this they believed they needed to form their own church of visible saints.  This quest for a pure church required not only a disciplined lifestyle based on the Bible but also the excommunication of those who strayed from the path of righteousness.  (See Philbrick p. 12)

 

The Geneva Bible and the City on a Hill

The Cambridge Geneva Bible of 1591 was the edition carried by the Pilgrims when they fled to America. As such, it directly provided much of the genius and inspiration which carried those courageous and faithful souls through their trials, and provided the spiritual, intellectual and legal basis for establishment and flourishing of the colonies. Thus, it became the foundation for establishment of the American Nation.  (Emphasis added; Source: Studylight.org)

When the Puritans’ attempt to reform English society was stymied, a renewed attempt was made in the New World.  Puritan New England was not so much a retreat as it was a utopian quest.  The Puritans believed themselves to be God’s elect like Old Testament Israel.  Governor John Winthrop’s seminal sermon “A Modell of Christian Charity” and the imagery of the Massachusetts Bay Colony as a “city upon a hill” that would be a shining example to all the world reflected the confluence of federal theology’s emphasis on the church as covenanted society and post-millennialist eschatology which anticipated the revealing of God’s glory on earth through his elect nation.  Later it would be transformed into the founding myth of the United States of America.  (See Robert Bellah’s Broken Covenant, Chapter 1 “America’s Myth of Origin.”)

Recent publicity materials claim the Geneva Bible was the foundational text for Puritan New England.  But that was not the case.  There were two English bibles used in New England: the Geneva Bible and the King James Version (aka the Authorized Version).  It was a common practice for ministers to use the King James Version in their printed sermons in addition to their free rendering of the Greek and Hebrew texts (Note 4, Stout 1982:35).

The presence of the two English translations was consequential for that tiny community.  The dilemma of the New England way lay in the attempt to fuse corporate solidarity based on Old Testament theocracy with the Protestant insistence on the salvation of the individual soul by free grace.  The Geneva Bible’s commentary notes encouraged a spiritualized reading of Old Testament Israel, while the King James Version’s lack of commentary opened up exegetical space for theocratic readings.  The King James Version was more popular in the Bay Colony while the Geneva Bible was more popular among the Pilgrims down in Plymouth Plantation.  The Pilgrims’ emphasis on free grace provided them with no cultural glue leading to withdrawal and stagnation (Stout 1982:29; Ahlstrom 1975:186-187).  Due to their inability to flourish, the Plymouth colony was made part of the Massachusetts colony in 1691.

Anne Hutchinson on trial

Anne Hutchinson on trial

The Geneva Bible played a role in the Antinomian controversy that rocked the New England colony from 1636 to 1638.  Anne Hutchinson favored the Geneva Bible which allowed for a more spiritualized reading.  During the court proceedings she was able to recite verbatim extensive excerpts from the Geneva Bible (Stout 1982:31).  Her ally, George Wheelwright, used the Genevan translation of Matthew 9:15 for his controversial Fast Day sermon to trumpet the covenant of grace over the covenant of works (the underpinning of the New England polity).

It has been noted that the Geneva Bible had undergone multiple reprint editions from 1576 to 1644.  This raises the question about the cessation of publication after 1644.  I suggest that 1644 correlated with the waning enthusiasm for the Puritan Project.  The Puritan Project was based on the notion of the church as a covenant community made up of believers able to testify to converting grace.  However, a new generation emerged of church attendees unable to testify to a definite conversion experience.  The Half Way Covenant was adopted in 1657 as way of accommodating the decline in spiritual fervor of its members and as a way enabling the church to retain influence in society (Ahlstrom 1975:108-110).   As religious fervor in New England waned so did the demand for the Geneva Bible.  By 1700, enthusiasm for the Puritan project had given way to the more moderate Congregationalism.

 

Scene_at_the_Signing_of_the_Constitution_of_the_United_States.jpg

Signing of the US Constitution

By the time of the Declaration of Independence in 1776, we find a very different America from the one the Puritans knew.  While Puritan New England figures quite prominently in the founding myth of the United States, it is important to keep in mind that the source of American democracy is quite complex.  It includes the religious tolerance of Roger Williams’ Rhode Island and William Penn’s Pennsylvania, John Locke’s liberal philosophy, Thomas Jefferson’s rationalism, and the more radical views of men like Thomas Paine and Benjamin Franklin.   It is important that we approach history critically even as we affirm God’s sovereignty over human affairs.

 

The Rise and Fall of the Geneva Bible 

The Geneva Bible was at one time the most influential Bible for English speaking Protestants.  This was the Bible used by William Shakespeare, Oliver Cromwell, John Knox, John Donne, and John Bunyan.  Thus, its influence on English culture was considerable.  So why then did it become the forgotten Bible of Protestantism?

The decline can be traced to three factors.  One was the lack of official support.  The Geneva Bible was produced in the Genevan republic, not in England where the crown was the supreme authority.  This republican bias is evident in its commentary that decried tyranny and encouraged revolution against tyranny.  For example, the commentary to Exodus 1, especially verse 19, noted the lawfulness of the midwives’ disobedience to Pharaoh.  Comments like these were likely to displease King James and his royalist supporters.  But there is no evidence of King James ever banning the Geneva Bible.  Those who make this assertion seem to have their history mixed up.

Another contributing factor was the growing radicalism of English Puritanism.  When it first came out, the Geneva Bible gave very little attention to the concept of covenant and the covenant as the basis for national unity.  It was the product of two exiled Englishmen concerned with promoting personal faith in Christ in the face of the Roman Catholic emphasis on salvation through the Church.  By the early 1600s England’s break from Rome was more or less an accomplished fact.  Attention then shifted to the more ambitious goal of “building an entire social order according to scriptural blueprint” (Stout 19982:25).  The growing interest among Puritans in covenant theology (federal theology) from late 1500s to the 1600s began to feed into their desire to reform all of English society in accordance with Scripture.  The Geneva Bible’s spiritualizing interpretation of Old Testament passages did not support their emphasis on national covenant.  This led, not to its repudiation, as to a quiet neglect by the Puritans.

kingjamesA third factor was the growing popularity of the King James Version.  As a result of the growing tensions between the Puritans and the more mainstream Anglicans, the Hampton Court conference was convened.  As a result of this meeting King James authorized a new translation that would be known as the King James Version.  Unlike the Geneva Bible, the King James Version of 1611 was very much a corporate venture.  It was produced under the sponsorship of the monarch and involved the finest Anglican and Puritan scholars of the time.  It contained no marginal commentary and only the barest summary of the chapter contents.  As part of the ‘Establishment’ at the time, the Puritans had no difficulty accepting the King James Version.  Stout notes:

It is not coincidental that the Puritan leaders’ preference for the Authorized Version grew in direct proportion to their growth in numbers and influence (p. 26).

The King James Version surpassed the Geneva Bible in popularity among the Puritan clergymen (Stout 1982:25).  This is no surprise given the fact that many Puritans were involved in the making of the King James Version and its outstanding literary style.

 

Conclusion

The Puritan Project represents an aspect of English Protestantism.  But it is important that we do not exaggerate its importance.  It flourished from 1570 to 1640 then went into decline.  It was replaced by Congregationalism, Unitarianism, revivalism, not to mention the Baptists and Arminians.  So while the Geneva Bible played an important role in English Protestantism, its influence would later be eclipsed by the King James Version.  Where Geneva Bible was particular to Puritanism, English speaking Protestantism would be more closely identified with the King James Version.

The King James Version became the most popular Protestant version in America until the twentieth century when newer versions like the Revised Standard Version and the New International Version began to challenge its primacy among Protestants.

There is not a little irony in the fact that Christians in the free church tradition like the Baptists are among the fiercest defenders of the King James Version overlooking the fact that their preferred version was sponsored by a monarch who persecuted the Nonconformists!  Given modern Evangelicals’ resemblance to Anne Hutchinson and Roger Williams one would expect them to prefer the Geneva Bible.  There is also irony in the fact that some neo-Reformed who favor dominion theology also favor the Geneva Bible.  If anything, they should be favoring the King James Version like their seventeenth century Puritan predecessors did.

Therefore, church history is not as simple as the promoters of the Geneva Bible make it out to be.  It is full of surprising twists and turns, not to mention ironic reverses!

Robert Arakaki

Next: The Geneva Bible compared against the Orthodox Study Bible

 

References

Ahlstrom, Sydney E.  1975.  A Religious History of the American People.  Image Books.

Bellah, Robert N.  1975.  Broken Covenant: American Civil Religion in Time of Trial.  The University of Chicago Press.

Philbrick, Nathaniel.  2006.  Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War.  Penguin Books.

Stout, Harry S.  1982.  “Word and Order in Colonial New England,” in The Bible in America (pp. 19-37), Nathan O. Hatch and Mark A. Noll, eds.  Oxford University Press.

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