4 November 1935 A.D. Rev. Dr. J. Gresham Machen—What is Orthodoxy?
November 4: What Is “Orthodoxy?”
The
following editorial by Dr. J. Gresham Machen appeared in the November 4, 1935 issue of The Presbyterian Guardian (vol.
1, no. 3). Machen’s editorials appeared under the title of “The Changing Scene
and the Unchanging Word,” with Isaiah
40:8
as a referenced Scripture text. The
Presbyterian Constitutional Covenant Union (PCCU) was organized by Machen and
others on June 27, 1935 in part as a means of preparing for an eventual
separation from the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. For slightly less than two
years, The
Presbyterian Guardian was the official magazine of the PCCU,
with its first issue appearing on October 7, 1935. Then, upon the
formation of the Presbyterian Church of America (later the Orthodox
Presbyterian Church), in June of 1936, the PCCU was dissolved and the magazine
continued publication under the auspices of the Presbyterian Guardian Publishing
Company. It was never an official publication of the OPC, though was always
closely associated with that denomination, and publication continued
until the October 1979 issue, when the magazine’s list of subscribers
was turned over to The
Presbyterian Journal.
What Is “Orthodoxy?”
by
the Rev. J. Gresham Machen, D.D., Litt.D.
[Note: Oddly, in what follows, Dr. Machen never stops to explain that
"doxy" means "teaching".]
Many
years ago, in that ancient time when jokes now hoary with age had the blush of
early youth upon their cheeks, when a man first asked, “When is a door not a
door?” and when the answer seemed to be a marvelously fresh and brilliant
thing—at some happy moment in that ancient time, some brilliant person said:
“Orthodoxy means ‘my doxy’ and heterodoxy means ‘the other man’s doxy.’ “
The
unknown author of that famous definition—unknown to me at least—may have
thought that he was being very learned. Knowing that the Greek word “heteros,”
which forms a part of the English word “heterodoxy,” means “other,” he built
his famous definition around that one word, and “heterodoxy” became to him “the
other man’s doxy.”
Possibly,
however, he knew perfectly well that he was not being learned, and merely
desired to have his little joke. As a matter of fact, the Greek word “heteros”
in “heterodoxy” does not just mean “other” in the ordinary sense of that word,
as when we speak of “one” man and “another” man, but it usually means “other”
with an added idea of “different.”
So
if we are really going to indulge in a little etymology, if we are really going
to analyze the words and have recourse to the origin of them in the Greek
language from which they have come, we shall arrive at a very different result
from the result which was arrived at by the author of the facetious definition
mentioned above. The word “orthos” in “orthodoxy” means “straight,” and the
word “heteros” in “heterodoxy” means “other” with an implication of
“different.” Accordingly, the real state of the case is that “orthodoxy” means
“straight doxy” and “heterodoxy” means “something different from straight
doxy”; or, in other words, it means “crooked doxy.”
Now
I am not inclined to recommend etymology indiscriminately to preachers in their
treatment of their texts. It has its uses, but it also has its abuses. Very
often it leads those who indulge in it very far astray indeed. The meanings of
words change in the course of centuries, and so the actual use of a word often
differs widely from what one would suppose from an examination of the original
uses of its component parts. Etymology has spoiled many a good sermon.
In
this case, however, etymology does not lead us astray at all. Orthodoxy does
mean “straight doxy,” and it is a good old word which I think we might well
revive. What term shall we who stand for the Bible in the Presbyterian Church
in the U.S.A. use to designate our position? For my part, I cannot say that I
like the term “Fundamentalism.” I am not inclined, indeed, to quibble about
these important matters. If an inquirer asks me whether I am a Fundamentalist
or a Modernist, I do not say, “Neither.” Instead, I say: “Well, you are using
terminology that I do not like, but if I may for the moment use your
terminology, in order that you may get plainly what I mean, I just want to say,
when you ask me whether I am a Fundamentalist or a Modernist, that I am a
Fundamentalist from the word go!”
However,
it is a different matter when we are choosing terminology that we shall
actually use about ourselves. When we are doing that, I think we ought to be
just as careful as we possibly can be.
The
term Fundamentalism seems to represent the Christian religion as though
it had suddenly become an “ism” and needed to be called by some strange new
name. I cannot see why that should be done. The term seems to me to be
particularly inadequate as applied to us conservative Presbyterians. We have a
great heritage. We are standing in what we hold to be the great central current
of the Church’s life—the great tradition that comes down through Augustine and Calvin
to the Westminster Confession of Faith. That we hold to be the high straight
road of truth as opposed to vagaries on one side or on the other. Why then
should we be so prone to adopt some strange new term?
Well,
then, if we do not altogether like the term “Fundamentalism”—close
though our fellowship is with those who do like that term—what term shall we
actually choose?
“Conservative”
does seem to be rather too cold. It is apt to create the impression that we are
holding desperately to something that is old just because it is old, and that
we are not eager for new and glorious manifestations of the Spirit of God.
“Evangelical,”
on the other hand, although it is a fine term, does not quite seem to designate
clearly enough the position of those who hold specifically to the system of
doctrine taught in the Westminster Confession of Faith, as distinguished from
other systems which are near enough to the truth in order that they may be
called “evangelical” but which yet fall short of being the system that is contained
in God’s Word.
Therefore,
in view of the objections that face the use of other terminology, I think we
might do far worse than revive the good old word “orthodoxy” as a designation
of our position.
“Orthodoxy”
means, as we have seen, “straight doxy” [or "straight teaching, straight
doctrine"]. Well, how do we tell whether a thing is straight or not? The
answer is plain. By comparing it with a rule or plumb line. Our rule or plumb
line is the Bible. A thing is “orthodox” if it is in accordance with the Bible.
I think we might well revive the word. But whether we revive the word or not,
we certainly ought to hold to the thing that is designated by the word.
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